OK - so maybe thanks to the EU we have the GDPR which seems to me to have perhaps caused far more trouble than it's really worth.
I'm not in fact sure whether the GDPR specifies what data a web site or seller can keep, or should ask for, or whether that comes under credit regulations in each country.
Of course the UK is no longer in the EU, so what we are doing in the UK now I do not know.
My concern is with web sites which insist on users "registering" and then in order to make a purchase one has to provide a credit card number. Obviously the second part of the process is necessary if a means of payment is to be provided to the vendor, but my concern is that some - maybe many - vendors then keep that credit number on file - "to make it easier for subsequent orders ...".
This is OK if one wants to have a near permanent relationship with a vendor, or a supplier, but often one only wants a very limited relationship - perhaps to buy just one item. However, one might still want to have a loose relationship with that vendor, to keep up with news, and other offers, but does not wish to have credit card and bank details retained.
However I do have an ongoing relationship with some suppliers, which does indeed make things simpler if I buy a lot from them. My point is that control and regulation of user registration - is often not at all transparent, and the various "Acts" are so badly implemented, with so little transparency, that laws/rules seemingly put in place to protect consumers may in fact be doing something very different.
I became aware of this as a problem a year or two back when I wanted to buy something from B&Q. Later I tried to buy something online from the same company, at which point I discovered that it had stored my credit card details. I insisted that those details were then removed.
It's not that I'm against some more "trusted" firms having some information - such as my name, address and even the credit card details, but I like to know that they haven't just "acquired" those by some means I don't know about, and that they are not keeping data for longer than necessary.
What do others feel - or even know - about this kind of thing?
I'm not in fact sure whether the GDPR specifies what data a web site or seller can keep, or should ask for, or whether that comes under credit regulations in each country.
Of course the UK is no longer in the EU, so what we are doing in the UK now I do not know.
My concern is with web sites which insist on users "registering" and then in order to make a purchase one has to provide a credit card number. Obviously the second part of the process is necessary if a means of payment is to be provided to the vendor, but my concern is that some - maybe many - vendors then keep that credit number on file - "to make it easier for subsequent orders ...".
This is OK if one wants to have a near permanent relationship with a vendor, or a supplier, but often one only wants a very limited relationship - perhaps to buy just one item. However, one might still want to have a loose relationship with that vendor, to keep up with news, and other offers, but does not wish to have credit card and bank details retained.
However I do have an ongoing relationship with some suppliers, which does indeed make things simpler if I buy a lot from them. My point is that control and regulation of user registration - is often not at all transparent, and the various "Acts" are so badly implemented, with so little transparency, that laws/rules seemingly put in place to protect consumers may in fact be doing something very different.
I became aware of this as a problem a year or two back when I wanted to buy something from B&Q. Later I tried to buy something online from the same company, at which point I discovered that it had stored my credit card details. I insisted that those details were then removed.
It's not that I'm against some more "trusted" firms having some information - such as my name, address and even the credit card details, but I like to know that they haven't just "acquired" those by some means I don't know about, and that they are not keeping data for longer than necessary.
What do others feel - or even know - about this kind of thing?
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