Skip to main content

Library for GDPR implementation

Project description

Django-GDPR Build Status

This library enables you to store user's consent for data retention easily and to anonymize/deanonymize user's data accordingly.

For brief overview you can check example app in tests directory.

Quickstart

Install django-gdpr with pip:

pip install django-gdpr

Add gdpr to your INSTALLED_APPS:

INSTALLED_APPS = [
    # Django apps...
    'gdpr',
]

Imagine having a customer model:

# app/models.py

from django.db import models

from gdpr.mixins import AnonymizationModel

class Customer(AnonymizationModel):
    # these fields will be used as basic keys for pseudoanonymization
    first_name = models.CharField(max_length=256)
    last_name = models.CharField(max_length=256)

    birth_date = models.DateField(blank=True, null=True)
    personal_id = models.CharField(max_length=10, blank=True, null=True)
    phone_number = models.CharField(max_length=9, blank=True, null=True)
    fb_id = models.CharField(max_length=256, blank=True, null=True)
    last_login_ip = models.GenericIPAddressField(blank=True, null=True)

You may want a consent to store all user's data for two years and consent to store first and last name for 10 years. For that you can simply add new consent purposes like this.

# app/purposes.py

from dateutil.relativedelta import relativedelta

from gdpr.purposes.default import AbstractPurpose

GENERAL_PURPOSE_SLUG = "general"
FIRST_AND_LAST_NAME_SLUG = "first_and_last"

class GeneralPurpose(AbstractPurpose):
    name = "Retain user data for 2 years"
    slug = GENERAL_PURPOSE_SLUG
    expiration_timedelta = relativedelta(years=2)
    fields = "__ALL__"  # Anonymize all fields defined in anonymizer

class FirstAndLastNamePurpose(AbstractPurpose):
    """Store First & Last name for 10 years."""
    name = "retain due to internet archive"
    slug = FIRST_AND_LAST_NAME_SLUG
    expiration_timedelta = relativedelta(years=10)
    fields = ("first_name", "last_name")

The field fields specify to which fields this consent applies to.

Some more examples:

fields = ("first_name", "last_name") # Anonymize only two fields

# You can also add nested fields to anonymize fields on related objects.
fields = (
    "primary_email_address",
    ("emails", (
        "email",
    )),
)

# Some more advanced configs may look like this:
fields = (
    "__ALL__",
    ("addresses", "__ALL__"),
    ("accounts", (
        "__ALL__",
        ("payments", (
            "__ALL__",
        ))
    )),
    ("emails", (
        "email",
    )),
)

Now when we have the purpose(s) created we also have to make an anonymizer so the library knows which fields to anonymize and how. This is fairly simple and is quite similar to Django forms.

# app/anonymizers.py

from gdpr import anonymizers
from tests.models import Customer


class CustomerAnonymizer(anonymizers.ModelAnonymizer):
    first_name = anonymizers.MD5TextFieldAnonymizer()
    last_name = anonymizers.MD5TextFieldAnonymizer()
    primary_email_address = anonymizers.EmailFieldAnonymizer()

    birth_date = anonymizers.DateFieldAnonymizer()
    personal_id = anonymizers.PersonalIIDFieldAnonymizer()
    phone_number = anonymizers.PhoneFieldAnonymizer()
    fb_id = anonymizers.CharFieldAnonymizer()
    last_login_ip = anonymizers.IPAddressFieldAnonymizer()

    class Meta:
        model = Customer

Now you can fully leverage the system:

You can create/revoke consent:

from gdpr.models import LegalReason

from tests.models import Customer
from tests.purposes import FIRST_AND_LAST_NAME_SLUG


customer = Customer(first_name="John", last_name="Smith")
customer.save()

# Create consent
LegalReason.objects.create_consent(FIRST_AND_LAST_NAME_SLUG, customer)

# And now you can revoke it
LegalReason.objects.deactivate_consent(FIRST_AND_LAST_NAME_SLUG, customer)

In case your model uses the AnonymizationModelMixin or AnonymizationModel you can create and revoke consents even easier.

from tests.models import Customer
from tests.purposes import FIRST_AND_LAST_NAME_SLUG


customer = Customer(first_name="John", last_name="Smith")
customer.save()

# Create consent
customer.create_consent(FIRST_AND_LAST_NAME_SLUG)

# And now you can revoke it
customer.deactivate_consent(FIRST_AND_LAST_NAME_SLUG)

Expired consents are revoked by running the following command. You should invoke it repeatedly, for example by cron. The invocation interval depends on your circumstances - how fast you want to expire consents after their revocation, the amount of consents to expire in the interval, server load, and last but not least, legal requirements.

from gdpr.models import LegalReason

LegalReason.objects.expire_old_consents()

FieldAnonymizers

  • FunctionAnonymizer - in place lambda/function anonymization method (e.g. secret_code = anonymizers.FunctionFieldAnonymizer(lambda x: x**2))
  • DateFieldAnonymizer
  • CharFieldAnonymizer
  • DecimalFieldAnonymizer
  • IPAddressFieldAnonymizer
  • CzechAccountNumberFieldAnonymizer - for czech bank account numbers
  • IBANFieldAnonymizer
  • JSONFieldAnonymizer
  • EmailFieldAnonymizer
  • MD5TextFieldAnonymizer
  • SHA256TextFieldAnonymizer
  • HashTextFieldAnonymizer - anonymization using given hash algorithm (e.g. secret_code = anonymizers.HashTextFieldAnonymizer('sha512'))
  • StaticValueFieldAnonymizer - anonymization by replacing with static value (e.g. secret_code = anonymizers.StaticValueFieldAnonymizer(42))

Project details


Download files

Download the file for your platform. If you're not sure which to choose, learn more about installing packages.

Source Distribution

django-GDPR-0.2.23.tar.gz (53.2 kB view details)

Uploaded Source

File details

Details for the file django-GDPR-0.2.23.tar.gz.

File metadata

  • Download URL: django-GDPR-0.2.23.tar.gz
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 53.2 kB
  • Tags: Source
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
  • Uploaded via: twine/3.8.0 pkginfo/1.8.2 readme-renderer/32.0 requests/2.27.1 requests-toolbelt/0.9.1 urllib3/1.26.8 tqdm/4.63.0 importlib-metadata/4.11.2 keyring/23.5.0 rfc3986/2.0.0 colorama/0.4.4 CPython/3.9.10

File hashes

Hashes for django-GDPR-0.2.23.tar.gz
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 964a0fc946fe4dfd8009c874054e8f428bb0a0cf586b3629bd4fc5e5fe23fca4
MD5 f3afdcbab553e2db7be9feaef92a8557
BLAKE2b-256 264c30ab7e7b9a91a31ccc0f82c7912579616149351f4d063267a8ca00006423

See more details on using hashes here.

Supported by

AWS AWS Cloud computing and Security Sponsor Datadog Datadog Monitoring Fastly Fastly CDN Google Google Download Analytics Microsoft Microsoft PSF Sponsor Pingdom Pingdom Monitoring Sentry Sentry Error logging StatusPage StatusPage Status page