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Last year, an online store appeared online that sold (and sells) t-shirts, banners and stickers with Pedro Sánchez's face printed on them and a phrase: "A good citizen obeys." This is Government Resignation , a portal that was born surrounded by controversy after a huge banner with that same slogan was displayed in mid-May 2020 on a busy street in Madrid. It was soon learned that the website, which had already gone viral, had exposed personal data of its clients. Banner displayed by the Gobierno Dimisiones store in Madrid in May 2020. Banner displayed by the Gobierno Dimisiones store in Madrid in May 2020.Popular Resistance A tweeter, Alvise Pérez, former head of the Citizens' Cabinet in Les Corts de Valencia, denied the claim and assured that it was an attempt at sabotage to discredit the web portal.
Now the Spanish Data Protection Agency has resolved the sanctioning process against the Government Resignation , considering it proven that the website actually violated the General Data Protection Regulation. However, there has been no fine: only a warning. They denounce that Europe has been left more unprotected in the face of false news about the pandemic due to Facebook's priority to English and the US The consumer organization Facua reported in a statement at the end of May last year how, after a complaint filed by Turkey Phone Number List the entity, a real estate agency had been identified as responsible for the website. In the same statement, Facua clarifies that the person who was then the sole administrator of the company had contacted him to clarify that he had sold the company, without detailing to whom. The store admitted not having reported the breach Alvise Pérez, who by then had promoted the online store through his social networks, reacted by denouncing a campaign of falsehoods.

In an image published on Twitter Pérez assured that there had been "no massive access to personal or banking data, nor any security breach", and that the bank data of the clients of the Government Resignation remain "in an international payment gateway." . Almost a year later, the AEPD rules that there was a security breach. In the proposed resolution that was raised last month, the director of the AEPD had considered several violations of the General Data Protection Regulation "very serious" that the Government Resignation website had not reported. The company that responds to the store and that receives the name of Resistencia Popular defended, according to the resolution, that it had not reported the security breach by concluding "that it is not a notifiable security violation" , understanding that "it is not considered a high risk for the rights and freedoms of six affected people.
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