we_are_borg
Well-known member
I fail to see what GDPR has to do with anything here? Unless the scope of the GDPR has massively increased since I last looked its only about personal data.
What do you think usernames, age, sex and emails are in GDPR.
I fail to see what GDPR has to do with anything here? Unless the scope of the GDPR has massively increased since I last looked its only about personal data.
What do you think usernames, age, sex and emails are in GDPR.
But what does it have to do with code review here on XenForo, specifically?
Or is this another tenuous link that because we allow unaudited code in the RM, if someone site was breached that it would fall back onto us? Now I know the EU has a pretty historic failing of understanding how the internet works, but I doubt they are that far out of touch. Though feel free to point me to the relevant section of the legislation.
You are now pushing your own responsibilities onto XenForo.Because in the GDPR we the customer need to have privacy and security first in mind, we can’t adjust XF or Add-ons to take that into account unless where developers. So XF is the only protection we have as customer to be inline with GDPR. People can say well forums have nothing to worry about if running a forum well maybe but if something happens and have a security breach or privacy issue then i dont want to be on the other end of government fines etc, one way or another you will pay the fine.
This has nothing to do with EU and understanding Internet, they are aware that most companies cant be trusted with reporting breaches in security and privacy. Now they have a stick behind the door to hit companies with heavy fines. Its the samething about the cookie law people think its only about the cookies but thats only a small part of that law, the same we see with GDPR its a very complicated law. But even if XF would not be liable if something went wrong your now saying we do not care what happens to you our customers we will not check anything while we can (like wordpress and WBB) if we want to.
Most add-on developers have clauses limiting liability. IANAL, so I don't know the scope of those clauses legally, but XenForo has similar clauses too as well as most software developers in general. I don't think there is any liability on XenForo or the add-on developer if there's mishandling of personal data. The GDPR enforces unlimited liability on the data controller, which is you as a forum owner. It doesn't try to extend the scope of that to software developers, to the best of my knowledge.That is because its specifically written in the law. XenForo has not stated this in its terms or guidelines. Hence, there may be implied responsibility.
With the GDPR coming up with fines of millions, its advisable to resolve this.
I suspect that GDPR compliance will become and issue and even a selling point for hosts.how many of you are contacting your web hosts and bugging them to reinforce their security, or hiring professional sysadmins to do audits on your servers?
They're not going to fine 10% of international GDP (as someone said earlier) or even $10k to a forum owner making $40k/yr and had a leak of usernames, emails, ages and genders. That kinda stuff is leaked all the time by forums. The bigger fines are going to be towards Google, Apple, government agencies, companies like Equifax, etc. Governments are the worst for data security - they have a lot more to worry about with the GDPR than a forum owner. EU has a decent enforceability record, but almost all forums are still wayyyy too small scale to chase after for data that's barely personal. Just look at VAT MOSS, it's enforced fairly well, even against non-EU companies (ESEA was fined for an undisclosed sum last year and forced to pay VAT on behalf of all customers as well, and they're not *that* large), yet most people ignore VAT MOSS regulation. Very few businesses on this forum adhere to VAT MOSS, even large companies like Zendesk are completely ignoring it and getting away with it.The GDPR explicitly forces privacy and security by design of software. I am not sure how that affects things. If at all. One thing is sure: the need for site security will become even more urgent with the GDPR multimillion fines looming over webmasters. I think this will force a change in xenforo customer attitude next year or after the first forum admin gets hit by such a fine. Especially when a non-EU forum gets fined and people realize it can affect anyone.
The GDPR really isn't relevant to this discussion.
They're not going to fine 10% of international GDP
You are now pushing your own responsibilities onto XenForo.
As I've said earlier, you should work with add-on developers to ensure the code they make is up to your standards. Do all your due diligence via the methods I stated in my long post. The risk of the results is, to some extent, on you. You can't push all your homework onto XenForo and expect them to do it all.
This isn't a huge market with lots of money to be doing thorough reviewing of the thousands of add-ons on the RM. It's not economic for XF and it's too much trouble for add-on devs.
The GDPR increases liability on forum owners, it has nothing to do with XenForo or the responsibility you think it legally has over the content in the RM. You are choosing to host that content on your website, if that means your website mishandles personal data that liability falls on you, as a data controller, for using software that allowed that to happen. I'm sure the software takes some liabilities as well, but really, I'd imagine most the risk is on you. You're trying to push it away onto XenForo and add-on developers when that's just not the case with the GDPR - it has no effect here and really we're just going off topic with the issue.
And talking about the issue, I really don't see the problem in this thread anymore. XenForo's current limited moderation of the RM seems enough to me. I don't see major issues with resources posted in that section, and hence don't understand people's complaints here.
But yet Wordpress and WBB can do a first scan of add-ons they are opensource company and a verry small company.
I guess XF is a UK company, and I can't speak to laws there, but in the US simply hanging a sign does not remove all responsibility. XF best defense is they take action when problem mods are discovered.
WordPress is a much, much bigger community than XenForo. We have < 20 active XenForo add-on developers that publish somewhat regularly here, and 20 is perhaps still being kind, it's probably around 15.Just so we are clear how how WordPress, manages the reviews, the fact of the matter is. They don't, not directly at least. there a a core team of volunteers that handle it. WordPress simple provides the means and the space where it is managed from. but it is a team of unpaid supporters that does all the work.
oDesk, one of the most popular outsourcing sites in the world, lists WordPress development as the fifth most-requested skill. Freelancer.com, a similar website, has thus far recorded over $3.5M in revenue for WordPress developers.
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