I decided to finally clean up an old account on CivitAI (https://civitai.com/). Nothing unusual - I just wanted to exercise my right to be forgotten, the one I heard about so much on Reddit before, being a regular lurker.
I sent them a polite email citing Article 17 GDPR. Gave them enough info to find me (email, username, first login date, payment history). Didn’t use my real name, didn’t log in - partly because I didn’t want to trigger Cloudflare’s fingerprinting again.
Their reply?
“When users delete their account, this action is permanent, since we delete any and all data associated with that account.”
Maybe? There’s no way to verify their claim without re-engaging. No public deletion policy (https://civitai.com/content/privacy). No confirmation. No alternative. Only if you log in to do it. Which means triggering Cloudflare’s tracking system again.
I shouldn’t have to expose myself to surveillance just to ask to be forgotten.
Honestly, I was taken aback a little. But fair enough, I thought. I still have a shield for myself - let’s escalate.
I filed with the Irish Data Protection Commission (DPC) - mostly because they accept anonymous, English requests.
They closed my case within days with this:
You’re from Ukraine. Not our problem.
No discussion of whether CivitAI targets EU users (they do!). No interest in the fact they process personal data globally. Didn’t even ask if I was in the EU at that time. Just a flat rejection based on my location.
Fine. Maybe NGOs can help?
I contacted:
- Access Now
- EDRi
- Digitalcourage
- epicenter.works
- Even tried the UK ICO (turns out, CivitAI blocks UK users now, so no luck there)
Out of all of them, only epicenter.works replied - twice - telling me to contact noyb.
Which is silly, because I already did. Over a month ago. Still no reply.
So here I am.
I did everything I could - correctly, thoroughly, and in good faith. But all I got in return is silence, deflection, bureaucracy.
Don’t get me wrong - I still believe in the idea of GDPR. I want to believe in it. But the enforcement? It’s a paper tiger. All bark, no bite. And worst of all, it doesn’t even have self-respect - happy to roll over the moment someone shows up without an EU passport.
This wasn’t about being petty or creating drama. I just wanted to get in control of my data, as was promised by the GDPR declaration.
But apparently, even that is too much to ask.
Anyway, vent over. Just wanted to share this so others don’t waste months chasing rainbows like I did.
And maybe - just maybe - someone at noyb, DPC, or CivitAI will finally read it and feel ashamed enough to act.
P.S. Why I’m posting it here:
- I think it fits this community topic
- This post was removed from r/gdpr by moderators
- Some subreddits ignored my request to approve this post on their subreddits
- r/privacy requires karma to post
- I was shadowbanned by Reddit for no apparent reason
- Similar post saw zero reaction on Mastodon instance
- Twitter & Bluesky requires solving a captcha that I’m incapable of solving
In addition, since the initial post on Reddit and Mastodon weeks ago, I’ve sent emails to various privacy oriented news outlets and public organizations, but I was ignored by all, but EFF which replied “we can’t help you”.
EDIT: To clarify a recurring point: GDPR does not require you to be an EU citizen or resident to be protected.
Under Article 3(2), it applies to any company that offers goods/services to people in the EU - even if the user is from Ukraine, the US, or elsewhere. if anyone think I’m in wrong, please provide source. I don’t see what I’m doing wrong here.
Proof (screenshots)






Thank you.
Because GDPR itself says I can:
https://gdpr-info.eu/art-3-gdpr/
Yet this same article in paragraph 2 literally says it only covers EU citizens.
“This Regulation applies to the processing of personal data of data subjects who are in the Union”
Why are you surprised when they point this out?
What line from article 3 makes you think that? It sounds to me like it’s only talking about data processors inside and outside the EU that handle data of people in the EU