Most likely, large companies will be required to work under this law
Posted: Wed Jan 22, 2025 5:10 am
All comments, user messages, etc. must be stored for at least a year. Applications through feedback forms, apparently, too. I don't know whether you should keep half of YouTube if videos are posted on your site (the user sees it on your site, after all), but perhaps you should. What will small and medium-sized companies do in such a situation, which are obliged to store all this? Almost certainly - nothing.
and they will work under it (mobile operators, federal Internet projects). kuwait consumer email list Perhaps this is even right. But any project where a user can create content or send a message now seems to be illegal. Because it will not be possible for a small project to fulfill all the technical requirements required by law and because there is no clear list of “how it should be done” with an understanding of how much it will cost financially.
Most likely, for small projects it will work the same way as the requirement of the law on the placement of personal data on the territory of the Russian Federation (i.e. in no way, because tens of thousands of ru-sites are hosted on foreign servers),” - Dmitry Skalubo, web analyst, one of the authors of the Texterra blog.
and they will work under it (mobile operators, federal Internet projects). kuwait consumer email list Perhaps this is even right. But any project where a user can create content or send a message now seems to be illegal. Because it will not be possible for a small project to fulfill all the technical requirements required by law and because there is no clear list of “how it should be done” with an understanding of how much it will cost financially.
Most likely, for small projects it will work the same way as the requirement of the law on the placement of personal data on the territory of the Russian Federation (i.e. in no way, because tens of thousands of ru-sites are hosted on foreign servers),” - Dmitry Skalubo, web analyst, one of the authors of the Texterra blog.