This browser is not actively supported anymore. For the best passle experience, we strongly recommend you upgrade your browser.
viewpoints
Welcome to Reed Smith's viewpoints — timely commentary from our lawyers on topics relevant to your business and wider industry. Browse to see the latest news and subscribe to receive updates on topics that matter to you, directly to your mailbox.
| less than a minute read

When your grandma breaches the GDPR...

Bizarre data protection news story of the week alert: a Dutch court has held that a grandmother was in breach of the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) for posting pictures of her grandchildren on social media platforms without their parents’ consent, and refusing to delete them after multiple requests.

Read my colleague Nadia's analysis of the judgment below.

On a personal level, it is obviously the polite thing to do to not post, or to delete if requested, pictures of other people if they (or their parents if they are minors) are not comfortable with it. However, to say that ‘consent’ is required under the GDPR has far-reaching consequences, not least because of the stringent requirements for consent to be valid – e.g. it has to be opt-in, clear, specific and informed.

Tags

data protection, grandma, gdpr, entertainment & media