Tracker data- subpoenable ?
Tracker data- subpoenable ?
Author
Discussion

speedbird1000

Original Poster:

153 posts

189 months

Sunday 28th May 2023
quotequote all
I have tried in vain to request clarity from 2 Tracker companies... cant get a reply.

I am asking, under my GDPR rights, will they delete my tracker historical data, so that if the data was Subpoena'd by a court, they could not have it to hand over, i.e its been permanently deleted.

It does not feel right that they have the data stored and your every speeding moment could be recalled in future. Anyone ekse thinking same ?

I think they do keep it and will never permanently delete it....we need a secret on/off switch to it;


Andeh1

7,488 posts

228 months

Sunday 28th May 2023
quotequote all
You'll probably get chastised here, but it's a fair point.

Same with your smart phone though, I bet Google and apple could provide an itemised account of your life to compare to whatever gov database already has on you.

Just depends on the size of the crime and effort required by the authorities to dig into you!

speedbird1000

Original Poster:

153 posts

189 months

Sunday 28th May 2023
quotequote all
Subpoena 'd Tracker history data could seriously hurt a real pistonheader's future, if a court uses it against them.

Google /apple speed data a lot harder to get and phones can always be switched off or left behind.

Just saying, in this ever increasing digital prison people should know a big file is there to be grabbed...could even lead to them going to jail...

Aunty Pasty

786 posts

60 months

Sunday 28th May 2023
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If you make a request for data deletion they should respond within a month to your request. If they don't delete they should give a reason why.

deja.vu

456 posts

38 months

Sunday 28th May 2023
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Has the Mrs found out about your affair and are you trying to cover your tracks?

speedbird1000

Original Poster:

153 posts

189 months

Sunday 28th May 2023
quotequote all
Yes one of them has responded after I got hold of the GDPR representative at the company. They were v helpful saying they reviewing with their lawyers and will reply soon.

I agree, as it serves no purpose after a short while ( i.e car not stolen) then they should erase the obsolete data permanently, especially on a GDPR request.

But possibly (hopefully not) it is being sold to an authority / it has value as "surveillance" data... some agency or other could be buying it.(i mean look what was really going on in twitter till Musk bought it) .... people have a right to know one way or another...

Terminator X

19,470 posts

226 months

Sunday 28th May 2023
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How would they know who was driving though even if they got the data.

TX.

speedbird1000

Original Poster:

153 posts

189 months

Sunday 28th May 2023
quotequote all
Once your in court and they have the data they can ask if you or your partner) was driving.
If you lied - its perjury and mandatory jail.
If you "dont know" there should be plenty of journeys in the data where you were speeding, so a jury can say some or all is you, beyond a reasonable doubt.
So then you *could* look like a nutter pistonheads speeder, and so on the basis of the subpoena'd data, you are going to jail....

Oceanrower

1,243 posts

134 months

Sunday 28th May 2023
quotequote all
speedbird1000 said:
If you lied - it’s perjury and mandatory jail.
Absolute bks.

speedbird1000

Original Poster:

153 posts

189 months

Sunday 28th May 2023
quotequote all
Jeffrey Archer ? ....lied went to jail for perjury... by all means add some context smile

Oceanrower

1,243 posts

134 months

Sunday 28th May 2023
quotequote all
Oceanrower said:
speedbird1000 said:
If you lied - it’s perjury and mandatory jail.
Absolute bks.
Ok. I’ll explain it for the hard of thinking.

Mandatory means it WILL happen.

If we use your sample of one then, yes, it’s mandatory.

If you include the thousands of cases where people commit perjury and don’t go to jail then it’s not mandatory.

Understand?

CzechItOut

2,156 posts

213 months

Sunday 28th May 2023
quotequote all
I'd imagine that if the data can be subpoenaed, then the company would argue they have justification for keeping it.

For example, companies will keep data on former employees for seven years after they have left, as that is how far back HMRC can conduct a tax review.

speedbird1000

Original Poster:

153 posts

189 months

Sunday 28th May 2023
quotequote all
I wonder what the facts are relating to this data and its retention.
Would have thought GDPR request asking for it not to be retained will do it.

donkmeister

11,586 posts

122 months

Sunday 28th May 2023
quotequote all
Trackers of old only responded when interrogated, as there wasn't a cost effective "always on" option for data. So, nothing to log and worry about.

If such a service still exists, use one of those instead.

(Edited as read OP as wanting to know what existing tracker data is being retained).

Grumps.

16,899 posts

58 months

Sunday 28th May 2023
quotequote all
speedbird1000 said:
I have tried in vain to request clarity from 2 Tracker companies... cant get a reply.

I am asking, under my GDPR rights, will they delete my tracker historical data, so that if the data was Subpoena'd by a court, they could not have it to hand over, i.e its been permanently deleted.

It does not feel right that they have the data stored and your every speeding moment could be recalled in future. Anyone ekse thinking same ?

I think they do keep it and will never permanently delete it....we need a secret on/off switch to it;
How much over the speed limit were you going?

anonymous-user

76 months

Sunday 28th May 2023
quotequote all
Oceanrower said:
Oceanrower said:
speedbird1000 said:
If you lied - it’s perjury and mandatory jail.
Absolute bks.
Ok. I’ll explain it for the hard of thinking.

Mandatory means it WILL happen.

If we use your sample of one then, yes, it’s mandatory.

If you include the thousands of cases where people commit perjury and don’t go to jail then it’s not mandatory.

Understand?
Bit rude. Keyboard warrior? He was only asking a question. Ok, he got his comment wrong but no need to batter him. Not unless you've never been wrong about anything in your whole life?

Captain_Morgan

1,425 posts

81 months

Monday 29th May 2023
quotequote all
Without a view on the rights or wrongs of this specific case it’s worth pointing out that even if the entity in question deleted the tracking data it would very likely be recreatable from the system backups for whatever the backup retention period is.

I guess the severity of the incident would be the key to the police requesting or not the backups.

Tribal Chestnut

3,001 posts

204 months

Monday 29th May 2023
quotequote all
And the police would need to know that a tracker was fitted.

trashbat

6,215 posts

175 months

Monday 29th May 2023
quotequote all
What's the plan here though, climb bloodied out of the corpse-strewn wreckage like Action Farage, quickly smash out a right-to-be-forgotten GDPR request and errr hope it gets executed by some 9-5 admin type before the rozzers arrive?

speedbird1000

Original Poster:

153 posts

189 months

Monday 29th May 2023
quotequote all
Yes I am thinking the data is up backed up in the cloud where it then maybe virtually impossible to erase, therefore, it can always be retrieved via a subpoena.

Any right to have it permanently erased under GDPR (if such a right exists?) will bot be / cannot hence be fulfilled ?

Idea is before any incident to request have data erased permanently, after say a week for peace of mind, question is... is it or can it be erased, so it not available to any hopefully unlikely future subpoena.