this post was submitted on 08 Nov 2023
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Wouldn't Netflix's password sharing fall under the same law then?
They use user information like connected wifi and position data to determine if a device is used away from the defined "home".
No.
Netflix logging your IP is the equivalent of taking a photo of someone in public. Not ideal if you're into privacy, but it's a public place, so it's your problem. YouTube's Adblock detection is equivalent to patting them down to see if they have a weapon and requiring their ID. The software actively looks for changes, using technology that could detect what extensions you have installed, gather data to profile you better for ads, and monitor what you're doing in your browser while the tab is open.
Both are ultimately for the same purpose, to prevent people from avoiding to pay them, but methods matter.
Incorrect. https://gdpr.eu/eu-gdpr-personal-data/ states IP addresses are personal data.
Wow, so basically blacklisting email sender's on ip address isn't allowed either? When is an IP address, an individual and when is it just a machine in the cloud?
What matters is the association of the IP to a person or account. If you receive spam and block the source IP it's not personal data. If you create an account on a website and they store your IP to it then it is.
Handling IPs for necessary technical service protection can also be acceptable without explicit consent as long as it's limited/temporary (you may be able to handle that without account association in the first place anyway).