What can ISPs do better? Removing racism out of internet

Sabri Berisha sabri at cluecentral.net
Tue Aug 6 18:31:59 UTC 2019


Hi Anne,

I would argue that if you're not in the EU and have no presence there, you are safe from GDPR. No matter how much they EUSSR wants it, they cannot enforce their laws in other jurisdictions. What would happen if Russia would try to enforce their laws in the U.S.? Same thing.

GDPR is the most ridiculous piece of legislation I've ever read, and a clear indication of where the EUSSR is headed to. A bloated business unfriendly socialist continent.

Thanks,

Sabri Berisha, Network Engineer
CEO/President, Cluecentral Ventures Inc
Volunteer, Barrett Elementary School
Author: www.null.nl
Network Consultant
M.Sc, MBA, JNCIE-M/SP #261, JNCIP-M/SP #381, JNCIS-ER, JNCIS-ENT, JNCSP-SP, ECE-IPN #2
Board of Directors, Villanova HOA
Licensed Pilot
Former JTAC Engineer
Member: AAA


----- On Aug 5, 2019, at 10:56 AM, Anne P. Mitchell, Esq. amitchell at isipp.com wrote:

>> On Aug 5, 2019, at 11:46 AM, bzs at theworld.com wrote:
>> 
>> My first suggestion would be to include an indemnification clause in
>> your contracts which includes liability for content, if you don't
>> already have it (probably most do.)
>> 
>> And a clause which indicates you (need lawyering for this) will seek
>> expenses including but not limited to legal, judgements, reputational
>> recovery (e.g., cost of producing press releases), etc, incurred by
>> actions taken by customer.
> 
> These are all excellent suggestions - and while we're on the subject of that
> sort of thing, *everyone* should have warrantees of GDPR compliance in any of
> their third-party contracts in which data can be touched, and *also*
> indemnification clauses in those same contracts if you are held responsible
> because those third-parties were breached, etc., and found to *not* be in
> compliance with GDPR (for which GDPR specifically provides - i.e. GDPR can go
> through the third-party contract and hold *you* liable).  This is one of the
> ways that GDPR can seep in to get you even if you think you're safe because
> you're not in the EU.
> 
> Anne
> 
> ---
> 
> Anne P. Mitchell, Attorney at Law
> CEO/President, Institute for Social Internet Public Policy
> Dean of Cybersecurity & Cyberlaw, Lincoln Law School of San Jose
> Author: Section 6 of the CAN-SPAM Act of 2003 (the Federal anti-spam law)
> Legislative Consultant
> GDPR, CCPA (CA) & CCDPA (CO) Compliance Consultant
> Board of Directors, Denver Internet Exchange
> Board of Directors, Asilomar Microcomputer Workshop
> Legal Counsel: The CyberGreen Institute
> Former Counsel: Mail Abuse Prevention System (MAPS)
> Member: California Bar Association



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