Yep, it's the esologs failure to comply with GDPR which caused John to be caught out lying to his girlfriend....LiquidPony wrote: »anitajoneb17_ESO wrote: »Not sure what the fuss over this whole thing is. The logs are going to be super helpful as a raid lead, and I'm pretty sure the pugs in a fungal grotto 1 won't care that you can't do more than 10k dps, so what's the issue?
Doesn't have to be about DPS.
Let's see John, student and ESO player. John has a very nice girlfriend, a lot of stuff to study for his studies, and enjoys playing ESO. Now there's this group raid on thursday night with his guild. And Jane - she's the girlfriend - wants to go out somewhere. Now John tells Jane that he has an important exam on friday morning, promises to study a lot and to go to bed early, kisses her good night and sits comfortably in front of his PC and prepares for raiding. Everything is fine, until the next morning, Jane sees the raid log on esologs...
I'm not sure that scenario takes so much weed to imagine. It's everyday stuff really. The part where the log says exactly what you've been doing in the game and when is already a problem.
Wow.
Just ... wow.
The ESO forums reach new lows with every passing hour.
VaranisArano wrote: »From my understanding of the GDPR: this argument boils down to the question whether or not a person's account name is considered personal information.
There is that aspect to it.
This particular thread is mostly about whether or not the ESO Logs website has GDPR compliant cookies/consent to use cookies.
But since none of us are actually GDPR experts AFAIK, we're mostly forum lawyering
anitajoneb17_ESO wrote: »Mudcrabber wrote: »None of the logs will show up in Google. That used to be good enough for most.
https://www.esologs.com/robots.txtUser-agent: * Disallow: /zone/ Disallow: /guild/ Disallow: /character/ Disallow: /reports/ Disallow: /server/
Does the GDPR have any safeharbor exceptions, where responsibility falls on the uploader instead of the service host? Sites like YouTube or Reddit could not function if they were personally responsible whenever someone's username was mentioned in a bad light.
I'm sorry but the "robot" thing doesn't make sense to most of use (unless I'm much dumber than most). Care to explain / elaborate a bit ?
anitajoneb17_ESO wrote: »LiquidPony wrote: »The ESO forums reach new lows with every passing hour.
@LiquidPony : would you mind coming with actually constructed, sensible arguments, instead of always coming up with short, implying (albeit meaningless) vocabulary such as "wow.... " ?
I'm close to believe you have no argument at all.
Ydrisselle wrote: »VaranisArano wrote: »Ydrisselle wrote: »Kittenhood
Yes, you won't find yourself on ESOLogs yet - because right now it's only working on the PTS, and only from yesterday. So I'm sure you didn't raid together with anyone on the live servers who are using it, since nobody can do that now
In addition, during the PTS, all logs are private.
I knowIt's still hilarious that somebody is defending the current default setting without even know that it doesn't work on live servers.
anitajoneb17_ESO wrote: »Your personal opinion has nothing to do with actual law.
Neither is yours, nor the opinion of your colleague at work, even if he's a lawyer.Just to make sure, I didn't talked with them about nicknames in game. We talked about real data.
Nickmanes are pseudonyms. Pseudonyms are real, personal data. Deal with it.
_____________
@VaranisArano : how do you manage to be so incredibly patient ? Kudos !
_____________bharathitman wrote: »So the 5k dps club is fighting back?
Yeah, noone should worry about toxicity, should they ?
Show me one thing mate. Where it is written that nicknames of your characters are yours? THES ARE NOT YOUR PERSONAL DATA.
From ESO TOS:
"By creating an Account, You agree that You do not own the Account, any user names created on the Account, any Content stored or associated with an Account (such as digital and/or virtual assets, achievements, virtual currency, and other Downloadable Content), or related data associated with the Account."
So please explain me how ZOS by posting something you don't own breaks your rights?
It's not about your interpretation, but interpretation of lawyers and judges, thus interpretation of law team > yours.
VaranisArano wrote: »My main issue with ESO Logs is simply that it assumes our consent. I wish it were Anonymous, unless you choose otherwise.
Mudcrabber wrote: »Does the GDPR have any safeharbor exceptions, where responsibility falls on the uploader instead of the service host?
Show me one thing mate. Where it is written that nicknames of your characters are yours? THES ARE NOT YOUR PERSONAL DATA.
anitajoneb17_ESO wrote: »
Show me one thing mate. Where it is written that nicknames of your characters are yours? THES ARE NOT YOUR PERSONAL DATA.
From ESO TOS:
"By creating an Account, You agree that You do not own the Account, any user names created on the Account, any Content stored or associated with an Account (such as digital and/or virtual assets, achievements, virtual currency, and other Downloadable Content), or related data associated with the Account."
So please explain me how ZOS by posting something you don't own breaks your rights?
It's not about your interpretation, but interpretation of lawyers and judges, thus interpretation of law team > yours.
Law trumps TOS.
It's been explained and quoted all over those threads. Just read them.
lordrichter wrote: »In this case, the ESO account name is an online identifier that is specific to the physical and social identity of a natural person. It does not matter who owns the account. ZOS is still required to act if an EU citizen demands it.
Law only applies to your data, which this isn’t. You agreed none of the data on the account belongs to you. You have zero ownership and thus, zero claim to any infringement on “your” data. @ names aren’t linked unless you sign up for the site so you can’t even try to argue it that way. There is nothing that could reasonably be construed as sensitive information
anitajoneb17_ESO wrote: »
Show me one thing mate. Where it is written that nicknames of your characters are yours? THES ARE NOT YOUR PERSONAL DATA.
From ESO TOS:
"By creating an Account, You agree that You do not own the Account, any user names created on the Account, any Content stored or associated with an Account (such as digital and/or virtual assets, achievements, virtual currency, and other Downloadable Content), or related data associated with the Account."
So please explain me how ZOS by posting something you don't own breaks your rights?
It's not about your interpretation, but interpretation of lawyers and judges, thus interpretation of law team > yours.
Law trumps TOS.
It's been explained and quoted all over those threads. Just read them.
witchdoctor wrote: »lordrichter wrote: »In this case, the ESO account name is an online identifier that is specific to the physical and social identity of a natural person. It does not matter who owns the account. ZOS is still required to act if an EU citizen demands it.
This assumes, and frankly, I think it is a huge assumption, that a CHARACTER NAME, not the @NAME, but merely the CHARACTER NAME, is such that can be found to uniquely identify you.
It also assumes then that, if so, the character name, identifying the @name, identifies you, the natural person.
I think that is a stretch.
Unless someone can refer to judicial decision finding, or implying such, I think that is one leap too far (to assume that combat logs associated with a character and two steps removed from the actual person is a breach of any EU law).
EDIT: because, as I understand, it logs the character name, and not the @name.
anitajoneb17_ESO wrote: »Law only applies to your data, which this isn’t. You agreed none of the data on the account belongs to you. You have zero ownership and thus, zero claim to any infringement on “your” data. @ names aren’t linked unless you sign up for the site so you can’t even try to argue it that way. There is nothing that could reasonably be construed as sensitive information
GDPR says otherwise. GDPR trumps TOS. Pseudonyms are private data. That's all there's to it. Deal with it.
[edit] Just don't participate in the content and you won't get parsed. People didn't care about you before, they certainly won't care now
Kittenhood wrote: »@RANKK7
That 'cookies' message on ESOLogs has always been there in some form or fashion.
(...) it also serves no purpose other than the spread of misinformation by the OP (Original Poster).
Hallothiel wrote: »As have noted on other threads about this, GDPR is a minefield at present and has not been tested / challenged in Court.
The main debate stems around whether your user name in a game can be considered personal information - GDPR speaks about ‘online indicators’ that can ‘directly or indirectly’ identify someone, which is rather vague. And do you own the right to that information, or does the game owner?
anitajoneb17_ESO wrote: »From what we know by now :
- If you're "anonymous", your combat data is being logged (if someone you're interacting with is logging), but not your @name and not your char's name.
- If you're not anonymous, both your @name and your char name are being logged. However, only your char name is being shown on the site. @names are not shared. They're used for the database's internal purposes.
That's why the option should be set to anonymous by default.
Well see here, the the named character is possibly still under a console username or email address soooo...ryzen_gamer_gal wrote: »One more try.
The legal argument will come down to who is and isnt a natural person.
Your named character isnt a natural person.
Even though you may qualify as a natural person (or who knows, maybe legally you dont qualify)
See the real problem now?
Reistr_the_Unbroken wrote: »Well see here, the the named character is possibly still under a console username or email address soooo...ryzen_gamer_gal wrote: »One more try.
The legal argument will come down to who is and isnt a natural person.
Your named character isnt a natural person.
Even though you may qualify as a natural person (or who knows, maybe legally you dont qualify)
See the real problem now?