Ship Your Enemies GDPR

Ship Your Enemies GDPR

Send your enemies a GDPR request

4 followers

This tool will help you send them a GDPR Data Access Request designed to waste as much of their time as possible. They are legally required to respond to your request within 30 days
Ship Your Enemies GDPR gallery image
Ship Your Enemies GDPR gallery image
Launch tags:PrivacyLegalTech
Launch Team
NMI Payments
NMI Payments
Don’t Integrate Payments Until You Read This Guide
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What do you think? …

dada c. ta
yo this is so g love the idea and all 😂🤙🏻
Erik Tammenurm

It's another tool where the owner just wants to see "the world burn" and have giggles about it.

Pros:

+ Provides information about the GDPR short-comings

Cons:

- Collecting data of your users, but non compliant with GDPR? A bit ironic? - An immoral tool. GDPR requests shouldn't be taken lightly

Yu Ji 纪宇
This is so bad and shouldn't get a #3 badge of the day. Technology is powerful, and shouldn't be wasted in some unethical shit like this. Think before ship PLEASE, "Good" should come before "Fun".
Vladislav Bulochnikov
ahahahah! neat shit! ))
Jamie Barton
What a waste of time.
techworldplus
Look awesome and great way to draw attention to the privacy topic. But one question in case if I need to use it in Germany is template sufficient? Or do I need to have German translation? Plus one additional question in the website it mention it can be used for landlords. May I use the same text for landlord living in Germany?
Andrew Prifer
Hi, European software engineer here, working for a medical SaaS company (we work with a lot of sensitive data). GDPR has not been an issue for us. If you take the proper measures to store your customers' data the right way, you can pretty much automate responses to GDPR requests and, as has been mentioned, you can ask for a reasonable fee. What I see is that there are mainly two arguments here against GDPR, both of them a little silly. Argument #1 is that companies suffer because GDPR can be abused. This is only the case for companies who don't take proper privacy measures, and honestly, GDPR's requirements are pretty sensible in this regard from a consumer point of view. I understand that converting to a compliant infrastructure is difficult for companies who got used to doing whatever they want with user-data, but maybe those companies should have been more privacy-minded from the beginning. The other argument is the annoying GDPR banners. Yes, they are annoying. But I'd pick them any time over not having any control over my privacy. I think in the end ridiculing Europe for its extensive regulations might come down to a difference in culture. In Europe, the US is getting ridiculed for the exact opposite. Besides, if you take a single glance on the website of this product, you can see that it's satire. You guys should lighten up.