If you want to further investigate: Link to Reddit post

12 points

Someone mentioned invoking GDPR’s right to be forgotten. Although comments are not strictly personal information, it could still work. I think I’ll try it soon.

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2 points

I don’t think they can just restore all comments and bypass the GDPR, that would be insane. It’s a very serious law in Europe.

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1 point

they are your IP that you can rescind permission to publish at any time

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2 points

I think if that works it would be a great solution! Processing copyright claims is pretty time-consuming, so they‘d have to put a lot of work into it

But the Reddit ToS states that by submitting content to their Services you

grant [Reddit] a worldwide, royalty-free, perpetual, irrevocable, non-exclusive, transferable, and sublicensable license to use, copy, modify, adapt, prepare derivative works of, distribute, store, perform, and display Your Content

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1 point

Depends on how they store the comments, IP is within GDPR, but even then, I will just claim that i have posted personal information on comments so it still applies. If the comment is connected to my user in anyway, it’s GDPR…

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0 points

I think you should definitely try, but I don’t think it’ll work. According to this stackexchange question they could argue that deleting your comments would break the cohesiveness of the discussion and make the available information incomplete.

Art.17, 3a states that the right to be forgotten is not applicable if processing of the data is required to exercise freedom of information. So I don’t think posts or comments are affected by the GDPR as long as they don’t contain any information that would identify a user

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1 point

Reddits privacy policy itself states that you can use GDPR or California’s CCPA and has instructions for invoking it (basically just sending them an email). https://www.reddit.com/policies/privacy-policy

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1 point

deleting from a database isn’t processing. It’s literally what right to be gorhotten requires

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6 points

Fuck. I really don’t like this.

So many trauma and support subreddits get deeply personal and identifying posts and comments about horrific shit people (me included) lived through and were trying to cope with, which got deleted several hours after posting for privacy reasons.

If this content gets revived by reddit, it puts a lot of vulnerable people in danger as it this type of ‘content’ is often harvested by users of other platforms who share these stories with huge audiences.

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5 points

Would this be a GDPR violation? Serious question as I don’t know

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1 point
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My belief is that no, it wouldn’t - because the posts don’t contain identifiable information about people. I’m not an expert, though, and I’d love for someone to come and correct me if I’m wrong.

Edit: I just saw that @S4nvers gave a more detailed answer than me a bit lower down, essentially agreeing with me but quoting the relevant part of GDPR to explain why.

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5 points

Mine are back as well! WOW, talk about being a scummy company.

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3 points

So section 230 protects social media platforms regarding content users post.

If they reinstate a user deleted post who owns it?

Hoping this blows up in their faces as it’s a really shitty course of action to take.

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0 points

I also don’t think GDPR looks to kindly at this.

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1 point

Legally, they are probably fine. They’ll delete your account and disassociate your comments from it if you ask and that likely has them covered.

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1 point

your post is your IP and you own the rights to it and the right to have them deleted.

https://www.dataprotection.ie/en/individuals/know-your-rights/right-erasure-articles-17-19-gdpr

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1 point

GDPR

The real PowerDeleteSuite is always in the comments.

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