top | item 17806954

You cant delete your netflix account. Doesnt this violate GDPR?

40 points| int_x | 7 years ago | reply

The only option you have is to cancel your subscription, its also impossible to change account settings without an active sub.

16 comments

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[+] closeparen|7 years ago|reply
The GDPR requires that a company implement the right to erasure on request, not that it have a button labeled "Delete My Account." Have you contacted support?
[+] abbiya|7 years ago|reply
If I ask Google to delete all my innformation, will they do it ?
[+] romanovcode|7 years ago|reply
Exactly this. Just contact them and they will remove your account. I've done it with multiple other services and they complied without problems through customer support.
[+] johangu|7 years ago|reply
Your Information and Rights

You can request access to your personal information, or correct or update out-of-date or inaccurate personal information we hold about you.

You can most easily do this by visiting the "Account" portion of our website, [...] You may also request that we delete personal information that we hold about you.

To make requests, or if you have any other question regarding our privacy practices, please contact our Data Protection Officer/Privacy Office at [email protected]. We respond to all requests we receive from individuals wishing to exercise their data protection rights in accordance with applicable data protection laws. Please also see the "Your Choices" section of this Privacy Statement for additional choices regarding your information.

Source: https://help.netflix.com/legal/privacy

[+] Zelmor|7 years ago|reply
You also cannot delete your HN account.
[+] genericid|7 years ago|reply
Netflix specifically targets EU users (e.g. by advertising in the EU and billing in Euros). HN does not.
[+] some_account|7 years ago|reply
Contact them and they have to delete the account manually.
[+] oaiey|7 years ago|reply
Imho: GDPR allows keeping if required by law. E.g. for long term archival of accounting information for tax reasons. That information, in some systems, might be the same as the user account itself and therefore might be totally acceptable. However, in that sample there is no reason to keep your password and your preferences or non-anonymzed stats.
[+] chris__butters|7 years ago|reply
The process of deleting your account isn't something that has to be you can do yourself using a "delete my account" button with half a dozen confirmation boxes.

They can process it themselves by sending a request and still be GDPR compliant.

[+] jsiepkes|7 years ago|reply
Same goes for Twitter, they wont delete your account either. You can deactivate it, but you cant have them delete it.
[+] ody4242|7 years ago|reply
GDPR also requires that you can't keep customer data indefinitely.
[+] COil|7 years ago|reply
I haven't renewed my subscription some months ago. I had a message mentioning that my playlists would be kept during one year and would be deleted after this period. Don't know if it applies to user information.
[+] asdkhadsj|7 years ago|reply
I hate rules like that. I mean, I love them, but we can't verify anything. Not sure how to solve that, either. Only thing that comes to mind is constant audit but that seems insanely unreasonable.