EU privacy-compliant video blur for faces, plates, and PII—technical measures supporting GDPR Article 5 data minimization.
GDPR Article 5(1)(c) requires data minimization: collect and process only personal data adequate and necessary for your purpose. For video, that means blurring identifiable faces, plates, and PII when the specific identity isn't essential to your use case.
Built for EU-based businesses, multinationals with EU operations, and compliance officers managing video data.
Locate faces, plates, documents, and readable text that constitute personal data under GDPR.
Blur regions per GDPR Article 5 data minimization—only obscure what's necessary for your use case.
Record blur decisions in your processing records and DPIA if applicable before publication.

GDPR fines averaged €4.8M in 2026 with enforcement targeting unnecessary personal data retention. Video blur is a technical measure demonstrating good-faith compliance when combined with legal documentation and consent frameworks.
Blur is not a silver bullet—GDPR compliance also requires lawful basis, data subject rights, retention policies, and DPIAs—but it's a visible, auditable step controllers can implement before publication.


Teams reach for this workflow when public space recordings for marketing in eu markets; cctv footage shared externally for investigations; event coverage with attendees in eu jurisdictions; corporate training videos with eu employee data. BGBlur automates detection so these scenarios stay publishable without days in a timeline.
Ideal audiences include EU-based businesses and organizations, Multinational corporations with EU operations, Marketing teams targeting EU audiences, Data protection and compliance officers. Pair this example with your policy review when footage is sensitive or public-facing.

同じデモクリップとステップバイステップのガイダンスで、同様のシナリオを探索します。