Do you stop keeping web server access logs? Do you disable comment forms? If you do keep web server logs or comment forms what do you do to make it comply with GDPR?
The comment form aspect is especially a tricky one. Many comment forms require only a name and comment. What if a commenter later asks you to delete all their data (that is to say, all their comments) from your website? How would you satisfy such a request when you can't even validate that the person who is requesting the deletion is really the person who authored the comments?
I am planning to create my own website on a small Digital Ocean server but these GDPR concerns are giving me headache. Hoping to get some wisdom from this thread?
Edit: If it helps, I am based in EU and UK. I live in both places at different times based on work availability. But for the good of the community, answers for other locations and regulations are welcome!
If that turns out to be horrible, I guess I’ll end up strung up by my thumbs in a European jail? But given all the other things to spend my time on, I’ve just accepted that risk.
I think I’ve also been convinced over time that comment fields on blogs aren’t worth it generally. If there’s meaningful conversations to be had, they’ll happen on platforms where readers link to your content.
This isn't a violation of privacy since you have the right to inspect the logs of your own server(s). Analytics like Google Analytics, etc are not privacy champions and use that data to feed into their AD business.
There is also AWStats which is pre-bundled with cPanel. The only caveat is that 30% of the traffic monitored is likely bots, scrapers, or otherwise malicious actors.
I don't use comment forms, as they are a headache to maintain over the years. I used to have comments but removed them and discussions move to other media (HN, Twitter, Reddit). For analytics I use Plausible [1], self-hosted, and that's fully GDPR compliant.
I live in the EU (NL) and the server is located in AMS3 for DO. This setup runs perfectly fine for me for several years now.
[0] https://jurian.slui.mn/
[1] https://plausible.io/