Someone make sure they don’t CTRL Z afterwards though
CriticalCobraz on
* Bavarian regulators ordered World (formerly Worldcoin) to delete biometric data due to alleged GDPR violations, sparking a legal dispute.
* World claims the ruling addresses outdated practices and has filed an appeal, arguing its current systems are compliant.
* The case highlights increasing regulatory scrutiny in the EU, raising concerns about World’s ability to operate in the region.
coinfeeds-bot on
tldr; The Bavarian State Office for Data Protection (BayLDA) has ordered Worldcoin, now rebranded as World, to delete users’ biometric data due to alleged GDPR violations. This decision has sparked a legal dispute, with World appealing the ruling, claiming it pertains to outdated practices and that their current systems are compliant. The case underscores increasing regulatory scrutiny in the EU, potentially impacting World’s operations in the region. The company is required to provide a GDPR-compliant deletion procedure and obtain explicit consent for data collection.
*This summary is auto generated by a bot and not meant to replace reading the original article. As always, DYOR.
CreepToeCurrentSea on
Iris Scans are still kind of suspicious though regardless if they are compliant or not.
4 Comments
Someone make sure they don’t CTRL Z afterwards though
* Bavarian regulators ordered World (formerly Worldcoin) to delete biometric data due to alleged GDPR violations, sparking a legal dispute.
* World claims the ruling addresses outdated practices and has filed an appeal, arguing its current systems are compliant.
* The case highlights increasing regulatory scrutiny in the EU, raising concerns about World’s ability to operate in the region.
tldr; The Bavarian State Office for Data Protection (BayLDA) has ordered Worldcoin, now rebranded as World, to delete users’ biometric data due to alleged GDPR violations. This decision has sparked a legal dispute, with World appealing the ruling, claiming it pertains to outdated practices and that their current systems are compliant. The case underscores increasing regulatory scrutiny in the EU, potentially impacting World’s operations in the region. The company is required to provide a GDPR-compliant deletion procedure and obtain explicit consent for data collection.
*This summary is auto generated by a bot and not meant to replace reading the original article. As always, DYOR.
Iris Scans are still kind of suspicious though regardless if they are compliant or not.