Legal Free Rein

We have put in place procedures to deal with any suspected personal data breach and we will notify you and any relevant supervisory authority of a breach if we are legally required to do so. Below we describe how we intend to use your personal data and on which legal bases we rely. We have also identified our legitimate interests, where applicable. In the above quotes, it is quite possible that the authors felt that their interviewees possessed unbridled royal authority to do what they wanted. But what follows the « free rule » in the quotes suggests another intent: speakers are referring to the freedom they are given to do what they want – not to their power as leaders to do it. The misinterpretation of the term « free hand » – which refers to unlimited freedom of action or choice – as a « free rule » is a grain of eggs with which writers too often struggle. If you are one of these people, we would like to offer you some mnemonic ways to help you mentally correct the « free rule » before it becomes an acceptable (but still illogical) variant of « free hand ». First, remember that governing as king and queen involves the freedom to choose and make decisions. Therefore, monarchs have a free hand during their reign. There are also a handful of other common figurative phrases that come from the reins of a horse that you can associate with « free course » if you have a brain spasm. The tongues of angels are unable to express what benefits man derives from the good disposition of the tongue and what is harmful and uncomfortable when we give him gratuitous blows.

— Alexander Read, The Surgical Lectures on Tumors and Ulcers, 1635 To determine the appropriate retention period for personal data, we consider the amount, nature and sensitivity of the personal data, the potential risk of harm from the unauthorized use or disclosure of your personal data, the purposes for which we process your personal data and whether we can achieve those purposes by other means. and applicable legal requirements. Note that we may process your personal data for more than one legal reason, depending on the specific purpose for which we use your data. Please contact us if you need details about the specific legal basis we rely on to process your personal data where more than one ground is listed below. We have appointed a Data Protection Officer (DPO) who is responsible for overseeing matters relating to this privacy policy. If you have any questions about this Privacy Policy, including requests to exercise your legal rights, please contact the DPO using the contact details below. As you can see, reins is the word that should be used when it comes to retaining or granting freedom of action; Domination, on the other hand, is reserved for domination over a people or a country. « Free Hand » may sound impressive, but not to your editor or teacher. Coming here was an opportunity to redevelop the market. I have my hands free to build the brand.

— Chris Townson, quoted in Travel Weekly, December 15, 2017 Here we can let our imagination run wild, with the moral certainty that science will not provide anything that tends to prove or disprove any of its fantasies. — The Salvator and Scientist (Chicago, Illinois), September 1896 If you wish to exercise any of the above rights, please contact us by phone at +44 (0)1473 810002 or by email at gdpr@free-rein.net She handed over the management of the company to her successor. The supervisor has/keeps control under control at each stage of production. « I was given carte blanche to redesign the galleries, » said Kowalski, who came to Rockwell in March.  » – Jesse Kowalski, quoted in The Berkshire Eagle, September 25, 2015 Request deletion of your personal information. In this way, you can ask us to delete or remove personal data if there is no valid reason for further processing. You also have the right to ask us to delete or remove your personal data if you have successfully exercised your right to object to processing (see below), if we have processed your data unlawfully or if we need to erase your personal data to comply with local law. Please note, however, that we are not always able to comply with your request for erasure for certain legal reasons, which may be communicated to you at the time of your request. Why it appears at a time when the horse was still the main means of transport is a mystery. On the other hand, nowadays, the misinterpretation of « free reins » as « free kingdom » is a bit more understandable – albeit grammatically incorrect – because how often does the average person handle the reins of a horse? For those unfamiliar with the equestrian origin of the expression, dominance, with its association with the monarchy (influenced by the media`s obsession with the English royal family), seems to be a better choice than a word for belts to control a horse, and an internet search will confirm that quite a few people agree. The term « free reins » is originally riding jargon referring to the act of keeping the reins (the straps used by a rider to steer the horse) loose, allowing the horse to move freely at its own pace and in the desired direction. The figurative use of the term for freedom of action dates back to the 17th century.

In general, we do not rely on consent as a legal basis for processing your personal data, except in relation to sending direct marketing communications by email where you have requested it. You have the right to withdraw your consent to marketing at any time by contacting us or via the link at the bottom of a marketing article we send. Freedom of action, which means « unlimited freedom of action or decision, » is often misinterpreted as a free rule. The term free path comes from riding and refers to the act of holding the reins that loosely steer the horse so that the horse can move freely at its own pace and in the desired direction. If we need to use your personal data for other purposes, we will notify you and explain the legal basis that allows us to do so. We will only retain your personal data for as long as necessary to fulfil the purposes for which we collected it, including to comply with legal, accounting or reporting obligations. Object to the processing of your personal data where we are relying on a legitimate interest (or that of a third party) and there is something in your particular situation that leads you to object to processing on that ground because you believe it adversely affects your fundamental rights and freedoms. You also have the right to object to us processing your personal data for direct marketing purposes. In some cases, we may demonstrate that we have compelling legitimate grounds to process your data that outweigh your rights and freedoms.