Google Account has been disabled because of a Python code(old.reddit.com) |
Google Account has been disabled because of a Python code(old.reddit.com) |
This means every time I look at a new Google product, I ask: If every Google product I use shut off at once, how bad would it be to add this one to the list? So Google Pay, for example, is a total nonstarter; in a situation where most of my communication methods suddenly break, simultaneously losing access to credit cards would be literally life threatening. Similarly, I could never recommend Google Cloud Platform to an employer; losing the ability to do system-administration work at the same time as losing access to gmail would just be too much to manage.
> my google play account with my apps, my google extension developer with my extensions, my google AdMob with all of my unpaid revenue, firebase, google analytics, and google search console...
I’d like to apply this algorithmic ban to Google employees’ private Google accounts so they too can experience the joy of getting punched in the face without recourse.
I “only” have my emails left at Google. Starting July they want to take my money for what they promised to be a free service forever. I actually look forward to migrating away from them so I find inner peace again.
Little did i know, they did nothing :)
Western governments need to start acting on behalf of the people. Break up big tech and bring the hammer down on companies that usurp a persons lifelong data archive and refuse to give them a copy.
I have Google Workspace Legacy accounts, so my family has stayed with Google for far to long. That’s ending this month. Even if it sucks and we lose some data, purchases, etc. right now, the long term benefit of abandoning Google is better for everyone IMO.
It's easy to imagine police using the same excuse as Google: "we can't reveal exactly what you did wrong, since that would compromise our methods to catch criminals". If it wasn't for the fact that we aren't used to that "just being the way it is" in that case, we would probably shrug and accept it, too.
Unless the failure rate is literally 0%, there should never be a permanent full ban.
Apply this to companies over a certain size.
There is perhaps the same in other juridictions (like California).
That said, I've never had a problem using it from the US.
Google unprofessionalism aside, the most reliable cloud storage in the world can't beat a solid local backup. Never ever keep your files in single copy, no matter who is the cloud storage provider; always keep a local backup, or to be more precise, the cloud storage should be one of the two backups, not the original.
Mirroring external mailboxes such as Gmail from Fastmail can be activated when creating a new account; so far it works really well.
Google's new motto since April 2018: Do the right thing. Be evil.
Scary to think that algorithms override even Google insiders when things break.
There are complex laws governing residency which vary country-by-country. It's not atypical that, for example, if you spend 183 days in a year somewhere else, you're no longer a resident.
You're generally only a resident in one country. This governs taxation -- taxes are primarily based on residency, with some caveats. As a US citizen living in the EU, you will not pay the same US taxes as you would if you were living in the US, and in many cases, zero taxes.
However, as the other poster pointed out, from the perspective of a tech vendor, understanding the difference between:
- EU resident
- EU resident using a VPN in the US
- EU resident traveling in the US
- EU non-resident living in the US
For each request which comes in is practically intractable.
GDPR is also framed as a basic, universal human rights law. That also can have unintended tentacles. If you don't want a liability hole, it makes sense to honor GDPR for everyone, in practice (even if not under your ToS).
Practically, that's what everyone does. I've never had a GDPR request declined on the basis of residency (the last qualification being important).
to change your status of residency, proof would be required.
and it depends who is asking. maybe i don't pay taxes as a resident, but for visa purposes i may still count as resident in my home country.
this is relevant now as china allows people only to enter by direct flight from their home country or country of residence. this is really messing with people who have their family in a third country. they have to make a detour to their home country if they don't have a residency visa for their family's country.
also if i go travelling for a year, i don't loose my residency status unless i stay somewhere long enough to establish residency there. that is, if i have a visa that allows that.
If you've lied, there are periodic audits, and you might get thrown in prison.
I assume you can lie going to China. If you do and get caught, you'll probably never be welcome to visit China again (or fines, or prison, or some other consequence; but most countries would just keep you out).
it always depends on who is asking. this whole subthread is about who the GDPR applies to. in your other comment you lay that out very clearly: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=31397369
the relevant question is: when do i loose my status as a resident of the EU if i am an EU citizen. i'd like to make the claim that the intent of the GDPR is to protect the people who are inside the EU at the moment the data is collected.
even if i just leave for a week as a tourist, and then use some non-EU service, the GDPR no longer protects me. it is unclear if the GDPR still applies if i registered with that service from inside the EU and they know that i am the same person that's now accessing the service from outside the EU, but as you said, the easy thing to do is to just assume that the GDPR does apply until there is a clear benefit from being able to not apply it, and in that case the company needs to show evidence that i am not an EU resident. on the other hand if i sign up for a service outside and continue using that service after i return to the EU, protection should start from the moment i come back.
my point is that this is meant to be not the legal residence status, but simply your location at the time, unless you happen to be in the EU only for a short visit, in which case the GDPR is not going to be of much use (it might still apply though. can i visit the EU as a tourist and then issue a GDPR data request or deletion or whatever other benefit the GDPR offers, and then go back home after issuing the request?).
which is different from getting an EU domain. there it matters that you have the legal residence status regardless of your location. if you have a multi year residence visa, you won't loose your EU domain just because you spent most of that time traveling outside of the EU. you'll need to return your EU domain only after you permanently leave the EU. (which every british resident had to do)
I assume you can lie going to China
you can't lie, they want to see evidence that you are a resident or they won't let you board the plane. consider that the point is to control infection vectors and they want to avoid people transiting through high risk areas. so this is not to punish people but to prevent the virus from spreading and if in doubt, they won't let you in.
https://gdpr-info.eu/art-3-gdpr/
However, the framing as a human rights law, protecting "fundamental rights and freedoms of natural persons," means that the intent is somewhat more broad:
https://gdpr-info.eu/art-1-gdpr/
It defines principles which are believed to apply everywhere.
That's reinforced by language like "This Regulation applies to the processing of personal data by a controller not established in the Union, but in a place where Member State law applies by virtue of public international law." This extends jurisdiction as far as practical, in ways which are legally ambiguous.
"Legally ambiguous" generally means that you might be right, but the cost of finding that out will be astronomical.
Human rights laws have an inherent friction to them. On one hand, if random dictator's private business violates human rights laws, that's outside of jurisdiction, so not much can be done about it. Sovereignty is an important principal. On the other hand, it's clearly viewed as not okay, and often has some ramifications at some point. If you're applying for a contract, and have a track record of human rights violations....