Mitigating AI risks: A comparative analysis of Data Protection Impact Assessments under GDPR and KVKK
Research Source
This paper critically examines the Data Protection Impact Assessment (DPIA) frameworks under the European Union’s (EU) General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) and Turkey’s Personal Data Protection Law (KVKK), with a particular focus on mitigating the risks posed by artificial intelligence (AI) technologies.
Executive Summary
This research paper examines a critical privacy challenge related to COMPLEXITY CASCADE — pii protection requires perfection across all layers simultaneously.
anonym.plus addresses this through 100% local processing eliminating cloud, network, and third-party layers, reducing the attack surface to the local device.
Root Cause: SD5 — COMPLEXITY CASCADE
PII protection requires perfection across ALL layers simultaneously. One failure anywhere collapses everything. The attacker needs to find ONE weakness; the defender must protect ALL layers with zero failures.
Irreducible truth: Protection = Layer1 × Layer2 × ... × LayerN. Any zero makes the product zero. The attacker gets to choose which layer to attack. The defender must achieve perfection across all of them simultaneously, forever.
The Solution: How anonym.plus Addresses This
Detection Capabilities
anonym.plus identifies 200+ entity types including OS telemetry identifiers, hardware UUIDs, background service identifiers. The local Presidio 2.2.357 + spaCy 3.8.11 architecture uses Presidio 2.2.357 deterministic recognizers with 121 built-in presets for structured identifiers and spaCy 3.8.11 with 23 language models, all running locally via FastAPI sidecar for contextual references.
Anonymization Methods
Redact is recommended for this pain point: anonymizing OS-level identifiers in documents prevents correlation between anonymized browsing and Windows telemetry. Replace provides an alternative — substituting hardware identifiers with anonymous values prevents cross-layer correlation. For scenarios requiring reversibility, Encrypt (AES-256-GCM) enables authorized recovery of original values.
Architecture & Deployment
Zero cloud dependency after activation. Ed25519 machine-bound licensing requires only initial activation — subsequent operations are completely offline. All processing stays local.
Compliance Mapping
This pain point intersects with GDPR Article 5(1)(f) confidentiality, ePrivacy device access provisions.
anonym.plus’s GDPR (data never leaves device), HIPAA (local processing) compliance coverage, combined with 100% local — data never leaves device hosting, provides documented technical measures organizations can reference in their compliance documentation and regulatory submissions.
Product Specifications
| Specification | Value |
|---|---|
| App Version | v8.10.5 |
| Entity Types | 200+ built-in, up to 50 custom |
| Detection Engine | Presidio 2.2.357 + spaCy 3.8.11 (23 models) |
| Languages | 48 UI, 23 NLP models |
| Document Formats | PDF, DOCX, XLSX, TXT, CSV, JSON, XML + Image OCR |
| Anonymization Methods | Replace, Redact, Mask, Hash (SHA-256/512/MD5), Encrypt (AES-256-GCM) |
| Architecture | Tauri 2.x (Rust + React) + FastAPI sidecar (~370 MB) |
| Platforms | Win/Mac/Linux |
| Licensing | Ed25519 signed, machine-fingerprinted, max 5 machines |
| Processing | 100% local — data never leaves device |
| Compliance | GDPR, HIPAA (data residency guaranteed by local processing) |
Research Limitations
Academic Scope: This summary reflects findings from the original academic research paper. Implementation contexts, regulatory landscapes, and technical capabilities may have evolved since publication. Readers should verify current best practices and compliance requirements in their jurisdiction.
Generalizability: Research findings may be specific to the studied populations, geographic regions, or technical environments described in the original paper. Organizations should evaluate applicability to their specific use case before adopting recommendations.
Not a Substitute for Legal/Compliance Advice: This research summary is provided for informational and educational purposes only. It does not constitute legal, compliance, or professional consulting advice. Consult qualified privacy counsel for GDPR, HIPAA, CCPA, or other regulatory compliance guidance.