HubertManne,
HubertManne avatar

the answer is yes. no matter what with that one yes.

ElPussyKangaroo,

Lmao

Virkkunen,
Virkkunen avatar

Brazil has the LGPD, which is basically GDPR-lite, that's why it's asking this question.

What data it is trying to collect and phone home however is what we should be asking about.

ChaoticNeutralCzech,

EU or Brazil?

Yes.

dumdum666,

Samsung is a blight on humanity regarding it‘s greed for data… they are worse or just as worse as Google

sadreality,

Their teevee is wanna be cell phone. Had to plug that internet and get a console...

AnUnusualRelic,
@AnUnusualRelic@lemmy.world avatar

I find it worrying that a hard drive potentially collects data.

ElPussyKangaroo,

It’s the software that comes with the SSD. Not the hard drive itself, to be fair.

AnUnusualRelic,
@AnUnusualRelic@lemmy.world avatar

A fair point. Still close enough to be worrisome. Also that software potentially updates the drive’s drivers and/or firmware.

agressivelyPassive,

That’s kind of its point, isn’t it?

snowstorm,

rofl thanks, nice laugh for a Monday

virku,

To collect data and send it to a third party, hence needing to know if you are protected by GDPR is not what a hard drive is for, no.

snooggums,
snooggums avatar

That got a chuckle, but no.

The purpose of a hard drive is to receive and store data, not to collect it.

Zeroc00l,

The hard drive isn’t, but the Samsung software they are choosing to use for some reason will be.

TWeaK,

GDPR and Brazil have better data protection laws, so if you click yes you’ll be accepting terms that limit the data they collect, as per those laws.

Technically you shouldn’t, because you have no grounds to form a contract in those countries if you don’t live there. However, technically terms and conditions are a load of bollocks that companies use to get away with things they shouldn’t.

HubertManne,
HubertManne avatar

Does it only apply to europeans living in europe?

TWeaK,

Nope, if you’re based in the EU you’re entering into contracts in the EU, covered by EU law. Frankly, even if you’re not based in the EU, if you get the option of having EU terms I would click EU terms.

If money’s changing hands, then that’s another matter. You’ll probably want to do it in your home country’s jurisdiction to ensure you get your consumer rights - in fact you’ll most likely need to do it that way. But browsing free websites on the internet is a different matter.

You shouldn’t rely on terms and cookie screens, though. You should set up good ad blocking on your network and devices, such that it doesn’t much matter whether you accept all the cookies.

shiveyarbles,

Oops you mis clicked

Okalaydokalay,

I updated today and noticed this as well. What came after were some EULAs to agree to so I’m guessing they add one extra one for those who mark yes on this prompt.

morrowind,
@morrowind@lemmy.ml avatar

Might not be data, otherwise it would include California as well

dumdum666,

Not likely - because the explicitly ask about GDPR countries

ElPussyKangaroo,

America isn’t that strict with its Data Privacy if I’m not wrong…

morrowind,
@morrowind@lemmy.ml avatar

Not America, just California. CCPA

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