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Fixed a typo, spelled out acronym, removed superfluous double spaces
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TylerH
  • 21.2k
  • 22
  • 229
  • 328

Short-answer, you can't.

The longer answer is mostly in the comments, but the core issue is that:

  • Questions and Answers you've posted are not personal data as defined by the GDPR.

  • When you posted content on any SE site, you did so under the Licensing Terms of the Terms of Service:

    This means that you cannot revoke permission for Stack Overflow to publish, distribute, store and use such content and to allow others to have derivative rights to publish, distribute, store and use such content.

  • ... as well as the Creative Commons CC BY-SA 4.0 as discussed here

IANALI am not a lawyer, but there may be some exceptions under the GDRPGDPR if:

  • Any of your posts contain personal information (which they shouldn't). InIn that case, you could Flag an answer to have a Moderator redact the personal content.

You can also, as mentioned in the comments, request to have your personal account information removed from the SE system. You seem to already be aware of this, however, as I believe I saw a comment from you to that effect (which I can't find or has now been deleted). AsAs you know, this will keep the content on the website, but remove your personal account details from it, as with other questions/answers from deleted accounts that you've assuredly seen here.

Not that I believe you intend to do so, but for any users considering it, please keep in mind that self-deleting existing content which is considered useful here may be a violation of the Code of Conduct and would likely result in the content being undeleted and locked.

Also from your comments:

The licence I agreed to what before the (OpenAI Deal)

This does not matter, of course. TheThe SE/OpenAI deal does not appear to violate the existing agreement between you and SE. YouYou cannot revoke your "irrevocable" license you have given to SE on this basis. IfIf you feel it does violate the existing licensing terms, you can, of course, consult an attorney who is more of an expert in IP/licensing disputes (vs. GDPR), but as you can imagine, this will likely be expensive and fruitless.

Short-answer, you can't.

The longer answer is mostly in the comments, but the core issue is that:

  • Questions and Answers you've posted are not personal data as defined by the GDPR.

  • When you posted content on any SE site, you did so under the Licensing Terms of the Terms of Service:

    This means that you cannot revoke permission for Stack Overflow to publish, distribute, store and use such content and to allow others to have derivative rights to publish, distribute, store and use such content.

  • ... as well as the Creative Commons CC BY-SA 4.0 as discussed here

IANAL, but there may be some exceptions under the GDRP if:

  • Any of your posts contain personal information (which they shouldn't). In that case, you could Flag an answer to have a Moderator redact the personal content.

You can also, as mentioned in the comments, request to have your personal account information removed from the SE system. You seem to already be aware of this, however, as I believe I saw a comment from you to that effect (which I can't find or has now been deleted). As you know, this will keep the content on the website, but remove your personal account details from it, as with other questions/answers from deleted accounts that you've assuredly seen here.

Not that I believe you intend to do so, but for any users considering it, please keep in mind that self-deleting existing content which is considered useful here may be a violation of the Code of Conduct and would likely result in the content being undeleted and locked.

Also from your comments:

The licence I agreed to what before the (OpenAI Deal)

This does not matter, of course. The SE/OpenAI deal does not appear to violate the existing agreement between you and SE. You cannot revoke your "irrevocable" license you have given to SE on this basis. If you feel it does violate the existing licensing terms, you can, of course, consult an attorney who is more of an expert in IP/licensing disputes (vs. GDPR), but as you can imagine, this will likely be expensive and fruitless.

Short-answer, you can't.

The longer answer is mostly in the comments, but the core issue is that:

  • Questions and Answers you've posted are not personal data as defined by the GDPR.

  • When you posted content on any SE site, you did so under the Licensing Terms of the Terms of Service:

    This means that you cannot revoke permission for Stack Overflow to publish, distribute, store and use such content and to allow others to have derivative rights to publish, distribute, store and use such content.

  • ... as well as the Creative Commons CC BY-SA 4.0 as discussed here

I am not a lawyer, but there may be some exceptions under the GDPR if:

  • Any of your posts contain personal information (which they shouldn't). In that case, you could Flag an answer to have a Moderator redact the personal content.

You can also, as mentioned in the comments, request to have your personal account information removed from the SE system. You seem to already be aware of this, however, as I believe I saw a comment from you to that effect (which I can't find or has now been deleted). As you know, this will keep the content on the website, but remove your personal account details from it, as with other questions/answers from deleted accounts that you've assuredly seen here.

Not that I believe you intend to do so, but for any users considering it, please keep in mind that self-deleting existing content which is considered useful here may be a violation of the Code of Conduct and would likely result in the content being undeleted and locked.

Also from your comments:

The licence I agreed to what before the (OpenAI Deal)

This does not matter, of course. The SE/OpenAI deal does not appear to violate the existing agreement between you and SE. You cannot revoke your "irrevocable" license you have given to SE on this basis. If you feel it does violate the existing licensing terms, you can, of course, consult an attorney who is more of an expert in IP/licensing disputes (vs. GDPR), but as you can imagine, this will likely be expensive and fruitless.

added 230 characters in body
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NotTheDr01ds
  • 20.3k
  • 19
  • 45

Short-answer, you can't.

The longer answer is mostly in the comments, but the core issue is that:

  • Questions and Answers you've posted are not personal data as defined by the GDPR.

  • When you posted content on any SE site, you did so under the Licensing Terms of the Terms of Service:

    This means that you cannot revoke permission for Stack Overflow to publish, distribute, store and use such content and to allow others to have derivative rights to publish, distribute, store and use such content.

  • ... as well as the Creative Commons CC BY-SA 4.0 as discussed here

IANAL, but there may be some exceptions under the GDRP if:

  • Any of your posts contain personal information (which they shouldn't). In that case, you could Flag an answer to have a Moderator redact the personal content.

You can also, as mentioned in the comments, request to have your personal account information removed from the SE system. You seem to already be aware of this, however, as I believe I saw a comment from you to that effect (which I can't find or has now been deleted). As you know, this will keep the content on the website, but remove your personal account details from it, as with other questions/answers from deleted accounts that you've assuredly seen here.

Not that I believe you intend to do so, but for any users considering it, please keep in mind that self-deleting existing content which is considered useful here may be a violation of the Code of Conduct and would likely result in the content being undeleted and locked.

Also from your comments:

The licence I agreed to what before the (OpenAI Deal)

This does not matter, of course. The SE/OpenAI deal does not appear to violate the existing agreement between you and SE. You cannot revoke your "irrevocable" license you have given to SE on this basis. If you feel it does violate the existing licensing terms, you can, of course, consult an attorney who is more of an expert in IP/licensing disputes (vs. GDPR), but as you can imagine, this will likely be expensive and fruitless.

Short-answer, you can't.

The longer answer is mostly in the comments, but the core issue is that:

  • Questions and Answers you've posted are not personal data as defined by the GDPR.

  • When you posted content on any SE site, you did so under the Licensing Terms of the Terms of Service:

    This means that you cannot revoke permission for Stack Overflow to publish, distribute, store and use such content and to allow others to have derivative rights to publish, distribute, store and use such content.

  • ... as well as the Creative Commons CC BY-SA 4.0 as discussed here

IANAL, but there may be some exceptions under the GDRP if:

  • Any of your posts contain personal information (which they shouldn't). In that case, you could Flag an answer to have a Moderator redact the personal content.

You can also, as mentioned in the comments, request to have your personal account information removed from the SE system. You seem to already be aware of this, however, as I believe I saw a comment from you to that effect (which I can't find or has now been deleted). As you know, this will keep the content on the website, but remove your personal account details from it, as with other questions/answers from deleted accounts that you've assuredly seen here.

Not that I believe you intend to do so, but for any users considering it, please keep in mind that self-deleting existing content which is considered useful here may be a violation of the Code of Conduct and would likely result in the content being undeleted and locked.

Also from your comments:

The licence I agreed to what before the (OpenAI Deal)

This does not matter, of course. The SE/OpenAI deal does not appear to violate the existing agreement between you and SE. You cannot revoke your "irrevocable" license you have given to SE on this basis.

Short-answer, you can't.

The longer answer is mostly in the comments, but the core issue is that:

  • Questions and Answers you've posted are not personal data as defined by the GDPR.

  • When you posted content on any SE site, you did so under the Licensing Terms of the Terms of Service:

    This means that you cannot revoke permission for Stack Overflow to publish, distribute, store and use such content and to allow others to have derivative rights to publish, distribute, store and use such content.

  • ... as well as the Creative Commons CC BY-SA 4.0 as discussed here

IANAL, but there may be some exceptions under the GDRP if:

  • Any of your posts contain personal information (which they shouldn't). In that case, you could Flag an answer to have a Moderator redact the personal content.

You can also, as mentioned in the comments, request to have your personal account information removed from the SE system. You seem to already be aware of this, however, as I believe I saw a comment from you to that effect (which I can't find or has now been deleted). As you know, this will keep the content on the website, but remove your personal account details from it, as with other questions/answers from deleted accounts that you've assuredly seen here.

Not that I believe you intend to do so, but for any users considering it, please keep in mind that self-deleting existing content which is considered useful here may be a violation of the Code of Conduct and would likely result in the content being undeleted and locked.

Also from your comments:

The licence I agreed to what before the (OpenAI Deal)

This does not matter, of course. The SE/OpenAI deal does not appear to violate the existing agreement between you and SE. You cannot revoke your "irrevocable" license you have given to SE on this basis. If you feel it does violate the existing licensing terms, you can, of course, consult an attorney who is more of an expert in IP/licensing disputes (vs. GDPR), but as you can imagine, this will likely be expensive and fruitless.

Source Link
NotTheDr01ds
  • 20.3k
  • 19
  • 45

Short-answer, you can't.

The longer answer is mostly in the comments, but the core issue is that:

  • Questions and Answers you've posted are not personal data as defined by the GDPR.

  • When you posted content on any SE site, you did so under the Licensing Terms of the Terms of Service:

    This means that you cannot revoke permission for Stack Overflow to publish, distribute, store and use such content and to allow others to have derivative rights to publish, distribute, store and use such content.

  • ... as well as the Creative Commons CC BY-SA 4.0 as discussed here

IANAL, but there may be some exceptions under the GDRP if:

  • Any of your posts contain personal information (which they shouldn't). In that case, you could Flag an answer to have a Moderator redact the personal content.

You can also, as mentioned in the comments, request to have your personal account information removed from the SE system. You seem to already be aware of this, however, as I believe I saw a comment from you to that effect (which I can't find or has now been deleted). As you know, this will keep the content on the website, but remove your personal account details from it, as with other questions/answers from deleted accounts that you've assuredly seen here.

Not that I believe you intend to do so, but for any users considering it, please keep in mind that self-deleting existing content which is considered useful here may be a violation of the Code of Conduct and would likely result in the content being undeleted and locked.

Also from your comments:

The licence I agreed to what before the (OpenAI Deal)

This does not matter, of course. The SE/OpenAI deal does not appear to violate the existing agreement between you and SE. You cannot revoke your "irrevocable" license you have given to SE on this basis.