It should be quite obvious for anyone that knows me that I’m not a lawyer, and therefore that what follows is not legal advice. For anyone who doesn’t know me: I’m not a lawyer, I’m certainly not your lawyer, and what follows is definitely not legal advice.
With that out of the way, I wanted to give you some bits of information that might feed into your GDPR planning, as they come up more from the marketing side than the pure legal interpretation of your obligations and responsibilities under this new legislation. While most legal departments will be considering the direct impacts of the GDPR on their own operations, many might miss the impacts that other companies’ (namely, in this case, Google’s) compliance actions have on your data.
But I might be getting a bit ahead of myself: it’s quite possible that not all of you know what the GDPR is, and why or whether you should care. If you do know what it is, and you just want to get to my opinions, go ahead and skip down the page.
What is the GDPR?
The tweet-length version is that the GDPR (General Data Protection Regulation) is new EU legislation covering data protection and privacy for EU citizens, and it applies to all companies offering goods or services to people in the EU.
Even if you aren’t based in the EU, it applies to your company if you have customers who are, and it has teeth (fines of up to the greater of 4% of global revenue or EUR20m). It comes into force on May 25. You have probably heard about it through the myriad organizations who put you on their email list without asking and are now emailing you to “opt back in.”
In most companies, it will not fall to the marketing team to research everything that has to change and achieve compliance, though it is worth getting up to speed with at least the high-level outline and in particular its requirements around informed consent, which is:
"...any freely given, specific, informed, and unambiguous indication of the data subject's wishes by which he or she, by a statement or by a clear affirmative action, signifies agreement to the processing of personal data relating to him or her."
As always, when laws are made about new technology, there are many questions to be resolved, and indeed, jokes to be made:
Can you recommend a GDPR expert?
-yes
Can I have their email address?
-no
— Adam Cleevely (@ACleevely) May 2, 2018
But my post today isn’t about what you should do to get compliant — that’s specific to your circumstances — and a ton has been written about this already:
- I’ve found value in the content Ometria has produced on this front, e.g. 6 things e-commerce marketers should know about GDPR and their deeper GDPR guide (registration required)
- If you work in the area, this GDPR impact on social post from Buffer will get you up to speed there
- And for the paid marketers among us, this GDPR impact on AdWords article from WordStream is what you need
My intention is not to write a general guide, but rather to warn you about two specific things you should be doing with analytics (Google Analytics in particular) as a result of changes Google is making because of GDPR.
Unexpected consequences of GDPR
When you deal directly with a person in the EU, and they give you personally identifiable information (PII) about themselves, you are typically in what is called the "data controller" role. The GDPR also identifies another role, which it calls "data processor," which is any other company your company uses as a supplier and which handles that PII. When you use a product like Google Analytics on your website, Google is taking the role of data processor. While most of the restrictions of the GDPR apply to you as the controller, the processor must also comply, and it’s here that we see some potentially unintended (but possibly predictable) consequences of the legislation.
Google is unsurprisingly seeking to minimize their risk (I say it’s unsurprising because those GDPR fines could be as large as $4.4 billion based on last year’s revenue if they get it wrong). They are doing this firstly by pushing as much of the obligation onto you (the data controller) as possible, and secondly, by going further by default than the GDPR requires and being more aggressive than the regulation requires in shutting down accounts that infringe their terms (regardless of whether the infringement also infringes the GDPR).
This is entirely rational — with GA being in most cases a product offered for free, and the value coming to Google entirely in the aggregate, it makes perfect sense to limit their risks in ways that don’t degrade their value, and to just kick risky setups off the platform rather than taking on extreme financial risk for individual free accounts.
It’s not only Google, by the way. There are other suppliers doing similar things which will no doubt require similar actions, but I am focusing on Google here simply because GA is pervasive throughout the web marketing world. Some companies are even going as far as shutting down entirely for EU citizens (like unroll.me). See this Twitter thread of others.
Consequence 1: Default data retention settings for GA will delete your data
Starting on May 25, Google will be changing the default for data retention, meaning that if you don’t take action, certain data older than the cutoff will be automatically deleted.
You can read more about the details of the change on Krista Seiden’s personal blog (Krista works at Google, but this post is written in her personal capacity).
The reason I say that this isn’t strictly a GDPR thing is that it is related to changes Google is making on their end to ensure that they comply with their obligations as a data processor. It gives you tools you might need but isn’t strictly related to your GDPR compliance. There is no particular “right” answer to the question of how long you need to/should be/are allowed to keep this data stored in GA under the GDPR, but by my reading, given that it shouldn’t be PII anyway (see below) it isn’t really a GDPR question for most organizations. In particular, there is no particular reason to think that Google’s default is the correct/mandated/only setting you can choose under the GDPR.
Action: Review the promises being made by your legal team and your new privacy policy to understand the correct timeline setting for your org. In the absence of explicit promises to your users, my understanding is that you can retain any of this data you were allowed to capture in the first place unless you receive a deletion request against it. So while most orgs will have at least some changes to make to privacy policies at a minimum, most GA users can change back to retain this data indefinitely.
Consequence 2: Google is deleting GA accounts for capturing PII
It has long been against the Terms of Service to store any personally identifiable information (PII) in Google Analytics. Recently, though, it appears that Google has become far more diligent in checking for the presence of PII and robust in their handling of accounts found to contain any. Put more simply, Google will delete your account if they find PII.
It’s impossible to know for sure that this is GDPR-related, but being able if necessary to demonstrate to regulators that they are taking strict actions against anyone violating their PII-related terms is an obvious move for Google to reduce the risk they face as a Data Processor. It makes particular sense in an area where the vast majority of accounts are free accounts. Much like the previous point, and the reason I say that this is related to Google’s response to the GDPR coming into force, is that it would be perfectly possible to get your users’ permission to record their data in third-party services like GA, and fully comply with the regulations. Regardless of the permissions your users give you, Google’s GDPR-related crackdown (and heavier enforcement of the related terms that have been present for some time) means that it’s a new and greater risk than it was before.
Action: Audit your GA profile and implementation for PII risks:
- There are various ways you can search within GA itself to find data that could be personally identifying in places like page titles, URLs, custom data, etc. (see these two excellent guides)
- You can also audit your implementation by reviewing rules in tag manager and/or reviewing the code present on key pages. The most likely suspects are the places where people log in, take key actions on your site, give you additional personal information, or check out
Don’t take your EU law advice from big US tech companies
The internal effort and coordination required at Google to do their bit to comply even “just” as data processor is significant. Unfortunately, there are strong arguments that this kind of ostensibly user-friendly regulation which incurs outsize compliance burdens on smaller companies will cement the duopoly and dominance of Google and Facebook and enables them to pass the costs and burdens of compliance onto sectors that are already struggling.
Regardless of the intended or unintended consequences of the regulation, it seems clear to me that we shouldn’t be basing our own businesses’ (and our clients’) compliance on self-interested advice and actions from the tech giants. No matter how impressive their own compliance, I’ve been hugely underwhelmed by guidance content they’ve put out. See, for example, Google’s GDPR “checklist” — not exactly what I’d hope for:
So, while I’m not a lawyer, definitely not your lawyer, and this is not legal advice, if you haven’t already received any advice, I can say that you probably can’t just follow Google’s checklist to get compliant. But you should, as outlined above, take the specific actions you need to take to protect yourself and your business from their compliance activities.
Great post Will... BTW still I have not found any indication from Google or any other search engine that GDPR compliance will become a ranking factor in their search results. HTTPS also shows that Google is beginning to favor websites with security and making it a important factor in their search engine algorithm. GDPR compliance website now going to become a standard factor that all websites will have to follow the way in order to avoid any Google penalties. GDPR will also affect the UX structure of the websites. SEO industry is constantly changes and evolves trends, regulations (GDPR) will definitely impact on rankings but still no official confirmation from Google spokesperson side.
Thanks Will for insightful post. It will really help us.
Hi Kuldeep. We were discussing exactly this topic on our internal company slack last week. My opinion is that there is no prospect of "GDPR-compliance as a ranking factor" any time soon.
I could imagine there ultimately being some kind of ranking factor around existence of privacy policies etc (much like there already is within quality score in AdWords) but this will not be explicitly positioned as being anything to do with GDPR in my opinion.
Agree. I think Google can not know if you acomplish GDPR because this is a technical question.
Hey, Will Crithlow
Good information, the new law gives more information and summarized facts about the problems being arised in daily lives.
Great job! The new General Data Privacy Regulation is driving me crazy so your article is really useful for me at this moment, I am going to start working on this right now.
Very good contribution!
Thanks, Will. Appreciate the insights. We've been diving in from every corner of the company to ensure we're helping our clients navigate the GDPR questions and implications - a lot to think about, a few things to get done.
I have been slowly digging in on this subject, and this really helped point me in the right direction. I am not sure how much it is going to affect my company, but it is definitely something we are going to get policy in place for. Thank you.
Same here. I don't know the consequences. The debate is too deep for me to keep track of it, I hope someone is paying attention to it. I think we don't have a choice but to agree with it and keep ours eyes open in the future.
Hey Will,
Great post this topic is a giant blackhole considering the fines it could command.
Do you know if if/how this will work for GA users-IDs, especially if you using the SFDC and GA 360 integrations to tie the user-ID to the Saleforce record? There shouldn't be any PII info stored in GA but we would be able to use a SFDC database to cross-reference a email address in SFDC to a user ID in GA .
Do you know if:
Hi Jared. These kind of detail-level questions will most likely rely heavily on the specifics of your privacy policy and what you promise users when they sign up.
As far as GA itself is concerned, I believe it continues to be OK to send information that is not PII but that connects to other systems that allow you to cross-reference with PII. The GDPR-compliance of this will rely on your basis for processing and user permissions.
You may be required to delete records held in GA if someone requests deletion. Google has promised a tool to enable this - though it may not be available until the 25th.
PS - I found this resource which should be helpful: https://developers.google.com/analytics/solutions/...
Thanks Will! I also came across this API from Google to delete User IDs in GA. I'll check with our legal team and see if when we delete someone from the automation database and CRM if we also need to delete the user ID from GA. Im hoping thats not the case because without the GA User ID being linked to PII in SFDC we would no longer know who that person is in GA.
Lots of grey areas around this, thanks for the help.
Thanks for the post Will, As per my understanding GDPR is designed to improve how the data is stored and used by giving more control to individuals about their data. It's been almost 6 days after the GDPR law the traffic from European region is dropped like a hell. Any one has seen any changes in terms of Traffic and Leads especially. Any suggestions or help would highly be appreciated.
There's no direct reason why GDPR should have led to a drop in traffic so I would definitely start by looking at other things - did you make any technical changes? Did any campaigns end?
If it was related to GDPR, I think the most likely candidates would be:
I'd be interested in a follow-up if you find anything else out. Good luck!
In theory, GDPR is designed to improve how data are stored and used by giving more control to individuals over their information and by obliging companies to handle what data they have more carefully. In reality, it's more annoying regulation, more problems for online businesses, and lots of headaches to come.
Thanks for the post Will, it makes the subject a bit more approachable and understandable. It’ll be very interesting to see the impact the regulations have when they are rolled out this week
Buen post Will!
Es bueno saber cómo actúa Google en este aspecto. Y por cierto, que nadie ha olvidado actualizar su política de protección de datos y adaptarla a las nuevas regulaciones europeas porque, además de que puede implicar multas importantes, en la cara de los usuarios, es seguro que dará una mejor imagen a nuestro sitio web.
Thanks, Will. Appreciate the insights. is there any official confirmation from Google's side for GDPR. Thanks for sharing your insight and action steps to take in Analytics!
Regards
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Solid coverage on this topic! Im probably not the only one who was a little alarmed and confused by the first couple emails Google sent out about this. Thanks for sharing your insight and action steps to take in Analytics!
Hi Will,
Thanks for the great advice! In light of the implementation of GDPR and its widespread impact on organisations, especially organisations which operate in Europe and/or globally, your article was particular relevant and beneficial. Getting acquainted with the ramifications of GDPR on one's organisation is certainly important for any organisation affected by it.
In practice, the new law is summarized in giving the user more information and facilitating the control of their data. If things are done well there should be no problems
best regards
Hi Will,
Congratulations on the report and the movements that must be made in the new GDPR law.I will put it into practice on my website.
is there any official confirmation from Google's side for GDPR?
Hey Will Critchlow
Great topic to cover via post!
Yes, we just started adding this in all our landing pages targeted to EU Countries, and we have started digging on the subject. We already placed this regulation in our plociy for EU market,and just waiting to how does this impact business.
Thanks for all your insight knowledge share.
Cheers
Thanks Will, I would never have thought that GA would take these kind of actions. It is good to know where to stand.
Hey Will Critchlow
Great post man!
I want to ask you that
In google analytics,
we have do not automatically expire option under user and event data retention.
So is it okay to select that option instead of choosing from 14,26,38,50 months?
and is it okay to select OFF for Reset on new activity?
As far as I understand it, the GDPR regulations themselves do not make any reference to any specific time periods. Google has provided these options because some companies want to promise their users that they will delete records after some months -- so now they can.
My understanding is that you will only need to select one of these time-restricted options if that is the specific approach you are taking, and you are promising this in your privacy policy / website terms.
If you set do not automatically expire then I don't think it matters what you set for reset on new activity -- I think that's only relevant if you are automatically deleting data.
Thanks for the advices. If you have any updates about this in the future, it would be nice if you could keep us informed via Moz Blog. Best Regards.
Thanks Will! Great contribution.