Ahoj, Dňa Fri, 24 Sep 2021 14:45:08 +0000 Steven Champeon via mailop <mailop@mailop.org> napísal:
> Looking up the domain in Google gives you the parent organization, as > well as a link to a French Wikipedia page containing their address, > leadership, history, URL, etc. so the net effect is that GDPR > destroying WHOIS has provided absolutely no "privacy protection", and > the illusory belief that blocking one of thousands of potential > sources of information will protect anyone's privacy (not that > corporations are people, despite whatever laws may state the > contrary) is asinine and delusional. While i cannot comment mentioned OVH domain, i will ask, why anyone have to know from WHOIS of my domain my name, or my address or anything about me as private person? Yes, if someone has archive of WHOIS response, it was there and i was not happy from that. Are you having label with these info at top of face when you are walking on the street? That some companies are misusing GDPR to hide own identity? That doesn't mean, that GDPR is bad, it only shows that some companies are (at least) suspicious. While it still can be private domain... As someone already mention, GDPR is step in good direction. Not perfect nor without problems, but good step and good direction. -- Slavko http://slavino.sk
pgpBaYUJ6qChJ.pgp
Description: Digitálny podpis OpenPGP
_______________________________________________ mailop mailing list mailop@mailop.org https://list.mailop.org/listinfo/mailop