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Auteurs principaux: Buckley, Gerard, Caulfield, Tristan, Becker, Ingolf
Format: Preprint
Publié: 2024
Sujets:
Accès en ligne:https://arxiv.org/abs/2405.10225
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author Buckley, Gerard
Caulfield, Tristan
Becker, Ingolf
author_facet Buckley, Gerard
Caulfield, Tristan
Becker, Ingolf
contents The General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) remains the gold standard in privacy and security regulation. We investigate how the cost and effort required to implement GDPR is viewed by workers who have also experienced the regulations' benefits as citizens: is it worth it? In a multi-stage study, we survey N = 273 & 102 individuals who remained working in the same companies before, during, and after the implementation of GDPR. The survey finds that participants recognise their rights when prompted but know little about their regulator. They have observed concrete changes to data practices in their workplaces and appreciate the trade-offs. They take comfort that their personal data is handled as carefully as their employers' client data. The very people who comply with and execute the GDPR consider it to be positive for their company, positive for privacy and not a pointless, bureaucratic regulation. This is rare as it contradicts the conventional negative narrative about regulation. Policymakers may wish to build upon this public support while it lasts and consider early feedback from a similar dual professional-consumer group as the GDPR evolves.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2405_10225
institution arXiv
publishDate 2024
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle GDPR: Is it worth it? Perceptions of workers who have experienced its implementation
Buckley, Gerard
Caulfield, Tristan
Becker, Ingolf
Computers and Society
The General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) remains the gold standard in privacy and security regulation. We investigate how the cost and effort required to implement GDPR is viewed by workers who have also experienced the regulations' benefits as citizens: is it worth it? In a multi-stage study, we survey N = 273 & 102 individuals who remained working in the same companies before, during, and after the implementation of GDPR. The survey finds that participants recognise their rights when prompted but know little about their regulator. They have observed concrete changes to data practices in their workplaces and appreciate the trade-offs. They take comfort that their personal data is handled as carefully as their employers' client data. The very people who comply with and execute the GDPR consider it to be positive for their company, positive for privacy and not a pointless, bureaucratic regulation. This is rare as it contradicts the conventional negative narrative about regulation. Policymakers may wish to build upon this public support while it lasts and consider early feedback from a similar dual professional-consumer group as the GDPR evolves.
title GDPR: Is it worth it? Perceptions of workers who have experienced its implementation
topic Computers and Society
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2405.10225