Title: Privacy question: personal data export doesn&#8217;t include posts
Last modified: February 6, 2022

---

# Privacy question: personal data export doesn’t include posts

 *  [Ate Up With Motor](https://wordpress.org/support/users/ate-up-with-motor/)
 * (@ate-up-with-motor)
 * [4 years, 4 months ago](https://wordpress.org/support/topic/privacy-question-personal-data-export-doesnt-include-posts/)
 * Hi,
 * I’ve been looking at the functionality of the WordPress core “Export Personal
   Data” tool, and I realized that the exported data for a registered user doesn’t
   include any indication of posts or pages they’ve authored, only comments and 
   media. This seems like a pretty substantial omission — am I missing something,
   or does the core tool really not provide any way of exporting that information?
    -  This topic was modified 4 years, 4 months ago by [Jan Dembowski](https://wordpress.org/support/users/jdembowski/).
      Reason: Moved to Fixing WordPress, this is not an Everything else WordPress
      topic

Viewing 4 replies - 1 through 4 (of 4 total)

 *  [George Appiah](https://wordpress.org/support/users/gappiah/)
 * (@gappiah)
 * [4 years, 4 months ago](https://wordpress.org/support/topic/privacy-question-personal-data-export-doesnt-include-posts/#post-15333205)
 * I don’t know the thinking behind this, but the traditional export tool (TOOLS
   => EXPORT) already allows exporting an individual author’s posts and pages (or
   any custom post type).
 *  Thread Starter [Ate Up With Motor](https://wordpress.org/support/users/ate-up-with-motor/)
 * (@ate-up-with-motor)
 * [4 years, 4 months ago](https://wordpress.org/support/topic/privacy-question-personal-data-export-doesnt-include-posts/#post-15333221)
 * Well, that’s all well and good, but it seems contrary to the purpose of the personal
   data tools, which is to compile a user’s personal data into a single structured
   electronic package to comply with the GDPR and other such laws that provide a
   right of access for personal data.
 * In that regard, it seems like the tool should include a summary of posts and 
   pages made, in the same manner it presents Media uploads. It’s honestly weird
   that it doesn’t, given that the tool otherwise produces what looks like a pretty
   comprehensive summation of other user data from WordPress core and participating
   plugins, which is why I was wondering if I was misunderstanding the way it’s 
   supposed to work.
 * So far as I can see, the Export tool for posts or pages isn’t subject to the 
   same request/confirmation/approval process as the Export Personal Data function,
   which is also not very convenient from a regulatory compliance standpoint.
 * I get that plugin authors may not set up their plugins to support the export,
   but this is about post and page authorship, which is definitely a core function.
   If core really can’t do that as part of the personal data export process, this
   should probably be a feature request, but before doing that, I want to make sure
   I’m not going to get yelled at for requesting a feature that already exists that
   I just don’t understand.
 *  [George Appiah](https://wordpress.org/support/users/gappiah/)
 * (@gappiah)
 * [4 years, 4 months ago](https://wordpress.org/support/topic/privacy-question-personal-data-export-doesnt-include-posts/#post-15333385)
 * I perfectly understand your position. I also don’t live in a GDPR jurisdiction,
   so my thinking may be tainted somehow. So please take what’s below as a mere 
   discussion point, and not an opinion in either direction.
 * That said, what I’m wondering is if… say, an online newspaper’s staff’s contributions
   published on a website ought to be considered “personal data” and therefore subjected
   to the same “personal data export” rules as a random visitor coming to the site?
 * I’m thinking the answer should be NO.
 * For, the staff writer may have a contractual relationship with the site/business
   that the random user may not.
 * And, indeed, the staff writer’s contributions may (arguably) not even be considered“
   personal data” at all. And whether “personal data” or not, the export and/or 
   erasure of such content would require a consideration of the contractual agreement
   between the two parties.
 * Indeed, the staff writer may not even own the content at all… making combining“
   personal data” with such “content” that may be subject to a contract in a single
   export… very problematic.
 * But then again, the choice could be given to site administrators to decide whether
   to include such content or not in the personal data export. But, then again, 
   as with all things WordPress, that’s where plugins may come in to fill the void.
 *  Thread Starter [Ate Up With Motor](https://wordpress.org/support/users/ate-up-with-motor/)
 * (@ate-up-with-motor)
 * [4 years, 4 months ago](https://wordpress.org/support/topic/privacy-question-personal-data-export-doesnt-include-posts/#post-15333423)
 * The applicability of privacy laws to published information that’s readily available
   to the general public is an extremely troublesome one from a standpoint of freedom
   of expression and freedom of speech. That said, the GDPR explicitly applies to
   information that has been published — in fact, it even includes an obligation
   to try to get other people to stop reproducing or linking to information that
   the data subject has exercised their right to erase or restrict processing. (
   I think that’s wildly incompatible with U.S. concepts of free speech, but that’s
   another matter.)
 * The GDPR does include stipulations that a controller can refuse to ERASE data
   where doing so would prevent the exercise of free expression. However, that exemption
   does not apply to the right of ACCESS or to the right of data portability.
 * I’m not a lawyer, but it would certainly appear that posts or pages contributed
   by a website user located in an area subject to the GDPR would likely be subject
   to the access and portability rights in the same way and to the same extent comments
   would. This is where the limitations of the Export Personal Data tool become 
   troublesome from a compliance standpoint.
 * I’m aware that there are plugins that allow other data to be exported. That’s
   not the point: The point is that a registered user of a WordPress website who
   requests a copy of their personal data using the core request tool would probably
   reasonably expect (and may have an enforceable legal right) to receive at least
   an indication of which posts and pages they’ve contributed as part of the package
   of information that tool outputs. If that tool really can’t do that, that’s a
   pretty substantial compliance issue.

Viewing 4 replies - 1 through 4 (of 4 total)

The topic ‘Privacy question: personal data export doesn’t include posts’ is closed
to new replies.

## Tags

 * [export personal data](https://wordpress.org/support/topic-tag/export-personal-data/)
 * [tools](https://wordpress.org/support/topic-tag/tools/)

 * In: [Fixing WordPress](https://wordpress.org/support/forum/how-to-and-troubleshooting/)
 * 4 replies
 * 2 participants
 * Last reply from: [Ate Up With Motor](https://wordpress.org/support/users/ate-up-with-motor/)
 * Last activity: [4 years, 4 months ago](https://wordpress.org/support/topic/privacy-question-personal-data-export-doesnt-include-posts/#post-15333423)
 * Status: not resolved

## Topics

### Topics with no replies

### Non-support topics

### Resolved topics

### Unresolved topics

### All topics
