Yes, I agree
Yes, I agree
That is excellent news, thank you for all your hard work.
Thank you very much.....really appreciated.~
Best wishes ray
Bob, please keep reporting how many members we have a while. It's inspiring to all of us, I think.
I got critique from a person at dpreview because I have put the URL to dprevived in my sig. Why single out one of several projects blah blah blah? I tried to list my reasons. One of them was people are already moving here and the most important thing is to not lose contact and for that we need a platform NOW because we have very little time.
I of course also said this is the most viable project and so on. Because it is. But that the we are growing is actually an argument for others to join.
I say "we", because thanks to your attitude Bob, I do feel part of this. 😊
I’ve seen the same person post a version of that same message in reply to a number of threads on DPReview and it’s pretty clear they’re just a proxy for whoever runs the “clone” site. What’s interesting about that place is that if you browse all the related “community” sites on there, dedicated to individual brands, many of them have posts dating back a year or two but have simply sat there and never taken off. So while the “clone” forum is new, that whole effort is clearly just trying to breathe life into a project that already failed some time ago.
DPRevived has the clear advantage of being a fresh new start IMO, and already has a much more open and friendly culture.
Great 👍
Number of threads, posts and uploaded images would make some nice gauge.
Great 👍
Number of threads, posts and uploaded images would make some nice gauge.
404, 1856, 327
Onwards and upwards. Time to make the new DPR the goto photography website! I am 100 percent on board!
@DannoB has written: @bobn2 has written: @meow has written:What's the competition? DPR Clone? What is that communitydummy.com? A hosted service of some kind?
No, it's his own service, I think he runs a server company. I only say 'competition' because I reached out to him and the response was along the lines of 'I'm the boss and you're welcome to hand over the community to me any time you want'. I'm not sure why he chose the URL.
Yes, I am not comfortable with the attitude of the Admin guy there going by his replies to my and some other members' posts there. He seems to run his site along the line "It's my way or the highway".
I tried to close my account there but can't find how, so I posted a thread in Open Talk there asking how to close accounts on his site. Let's see if I get a reply.
Much friendlier and comfortable here :-)
Fwiw, I told the admin guy there to close my account properly because the instructions he gave me didn't stop the account from being used again.
I won't be going back there :-)
You should tell him, that you want him to delete all your personal date including your account based on article 17 GDPR.
You should tell him, that you want him to delete all your personal date including your account based on article 17 GDPR.
It's unlikely DPReview falls under the jurisdiction of GDPR, as such, since that applies to the EU and DPR is based in the USA.
If they were intending to remain online and active, non-compliance with EU requirements might still present a problem, since the EU might seek to limit their reach or otherwise penalize them. Since they are about to go offline anyway, I'd guess that any such considerations would be moot.
No just not true
GDPR applies to EU citizen's data wherever in the world it is held
@WWeber has written:You should tell him, that you want him to delete all your personal date including your account based on article 17 GDPR.
It's unlikely DPReview falls under the jurisdiction of GDPR, as such, since that applies to the EU and DPR is based in the USA.
If they were intending to remain online and active, non-compliance with EU requirements might still present a problem, since the EU might seek to limit their reach or otherwise penalize them. Since they are about to go offline anyway, I'd guess that any such considerations would be moot.
I think so too. I find these laws confusing, but someone in the know told me "my understanding is that most of these privacy laws apply to any website in the world that is used by someone living in the state/country/whatever that passed the law".
Is it too early to start worrying about spam accounts?
Is it too early to start worrying about spam accounts?
So far they all look genuine
@WWeber has written:You should tell him, that you want him to delete all your personal date including your account based on article 17 GDPR.
It's unlikely DPReview falls under the jurisdiction of GDPR, as such, since that applies to the EU and DPR is based in the USA.
If they were intending to remain online and active, non-compliance with EU requirements might still present a problem, since the EU might seek to limit their reach or otherwise penalize them. Since they are about to go offline anyway, I'd guess that any such considerations would be moot.
The website mentioned by DannoB is DPRForum.com is hosted in germany (its not dpreview.com). So this website falls under jurisdiction of GDPR
No just not true
GDPR applies to EU citizen's data wherever in the world it is held @SilvanBromide has written: @WWeber has written:You should tell him, that you want him to delete all your personal date including your account based on article 17 GDPR.
It's unlikely DPReview falls under the jurisdiction of GDPR, as such, since that applies to the EU and DPR is based in the USA.
If they were intending to remain online and active, non-compliance with EU requirements might still present a problem, since the EU might seek to limit their reach or otherwise penalize them. Since they are about to go offline anyway, I'd guess that any such considerations would be moot.
True but difficult to enforce, dependent of the country where the data a held
True but difficult to enforce, dependent of the country where the data a held
My point exactly.
Anyone can claim jurisdiction over anything, but unless they have viable enforcement mechanisms in place, it's meaningless. Per my earlier post, Amazon might be concerned about complying with GDPR if DPR was an ongoing concern for them. But under current circumstances it seems unlikely they would care.
@SilvanBromide has written: @WWeber has written:You should tell him, that you want him to delete all your personal date including your account based on article 17 GDPR.
It's unlikely DPReview falls under the jurisdiction of GDPR, as such, since that applies to the EU and DPR is based in the USA.
If they were intending to remain online and active, non-compliance with EU requirements might still present a problem, since the EU might seek to limit their reach or otherwise penalize them. Since they are about to go offline anyway, I'd guess that any such considerations would be moot.
The website mentioned by DannoB is DPRForum.com is hosted in germany (its not dpreview.com). So this website falls under jurisdiction of GDPR
This site is hosted in the Netherlands, so does it.