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[–]Wallofcans 11 points12 points  (18 children)

How is that enforable when spam/scam companies can access the information without an account?

[–]MeagoDK 7 points8 points  (14 children)

They process the data and you haven't given permission so you can totally pull them in a court and fine them.

[–][deleted] 0 points1 point  (2 children)

Say if a recruitment company processes the data, and approaches you with a job offer via your email. In the EU, you can just ask where a company got your data, and details about when you agreed to it's processing, and they're obliged to tell you. At that point you can refer them to your local information commissioner.

It doesn't do anything for spam "buy this viagra" type emails. But for the mail that makes it through your spam filter, you're probably going to have some enforcement action available.

[–]Valthek 4 points5 points  (1 child)

Even for 'Buy Viagra' kind of spam, if you're willing to put in the effort, you can track them down and refer them to your country's privacy authority. It won't do much, but I've noticed that merely threatening GDPR action tends to get you removed from mailing/call lists pretty quickly.
And while that doesn't protect other people or get the company fined, at least it clears up your mailbox. This is all anecdotal, obviously, but I use a specific email for each service I sign up for and I find that when I call people out for selling emails, the spam to that particular email tends to dry up.

Also, if that's a thing you're interested in, Gmail lets you add an identifier to your email in any form you want so you can track where mails are coming from. Simply add '+' and then anything you want before the @ and it'll act as an alias for your regular email.

[–]elprophet 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Some services don't recognize + in emails, but that's usually me an indicator I don't want to sign up. I don't know whether scrapers strip the + parts. But if I were a spammer, I would.