this post was submitted on 19 Oct 2024
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Update:


#Purism has decided not to honor my request to be removed from their #purismforums and be provided my data, stating:

We will not delete the anonymized accounts or posts

To #purismforum users, I do not consent to any of what has happened, and I recommend abandoning that site.

To users who stay there, never link to my projects or my socials and never mention me, my socials, or my projects ever again.

For those wondering:

I find myself in this situation because transphobic posts harassing me were allowed to remain on that site while Purism moderators removed, hid, or censored some of my responses. My posts were calm, civil, and respectful, while many of the posts directed at me were none of those things. Purism's moderators decided that it is acceptable for users to repeatedly post transphobic insults directed at a trans user, while it is strictly unacceptable for any user to say the word "fuck" in any context, including in a hidden thread that exists for discussions centered around the "politics" of pronouns.

Goodbye and good riddance

#FuckPurism

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[–] Septimaeus@infosec.pub 2 points 4 weeks ago* (last edited 4 weeks ago) (6 children)

It seems they’re implying they needn’t worry you’d lodge a complaint with your DPA for an apparent GDPR article 17 violation since your content was effectively “anonymized.”

IANAL but that sounds like a theory that is easily tested.

[–] user0@fedia.io 1 points 4 weeks ago (4 children)

@Septimaeus@infosec.pub

they did specifically assert that they aren't violating GDPR, and yet they are. it's not possible to "anonymize" my data, especially when it contains my writing/typing style and is displayed publicly and permanently.

[–] Septimaeus@infosec.pub 1 points 4 weeks ago (1 children)

Again IANAL (and am not privvy to details here) but just from an operational compliance perspective: anonymization is indeed a process that’s valid, but has rules, best practices, precedent, and so forth. It’s routinely applied to datasets with public-facing content but it’s not some kind of trick for evading individual deletion requests from users who have identified themselves and are already publicly associated with their content in close-knit communities (if verifiable anonymization is even feasible in such a case, which I doubt).

My advice would be to make a list of your content and politely send with the template to the instance admin (not the mods). I’m sure they’ll just delete. Seriously, no content is worth the headache.

[–] user0@fedia.io 1 points 3 weeks ago

@Septimaeus@infosec.pub

thank you for the advice, but they won't even allow me to delete the content myself. they are stubbornly claiming ownership of my words.

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