You probably need a lawyer to help you write the document the first time, and to update it when you make new partnerships or develop major new pipelines for data. You probably don't need a lawyer every time you receive such a letter.
You probably don't need a lawyer every time you receive such a letter.
For routine enquiries, maybe not. For a letter like this, from someone who is clearly intending to trip you up and cause trouble, our lawyer is the first call I'm making, every time.
And that initial conversation is already going to cost me hundreds of pounds and a half-day of work, even if I already have reasonable answers to anything we are actually required to respond with under the GDPR here.
> For a letter like this . . . our lawyer is the first call I'm making
/shrug It's your money. You could do that, or you could even light it on fire if you wish. It's no skin off my back. If your company is profitable enough to eat this self-imposed overhead, then its owners will just make less money. If it's not, then leaner competitors will replace it. I'm fine with either outcome.
Silhouette|8 years ago
For routine enquiries, maybe not. For a letter like this, from someone who is clearly intending to trip you up and cause trouble, our lawyer is the first call I'm making, every time.
And that initial conversation is already going to cost me hundreds of pounds and a half-day of work, even if I already have reasonable answers to anything we are actually required to respond with under the GDPR here.
discoursism|8 years ago
/shrug It's your money. You could do that, or you could even light it on fire if you wish. It's no skin off my back. If your company is profitable enough to eat this self-imposed overhead, then its owners will just make less money. If it's not, then leaner competitors will replace it. I'm fine with either outcome.