Files
wdmUI/decisions/0008-retencion-30d-default-argentina.md

2.2 KiB

ADR-0008 · Default 30-day retention for Argentina

Status: accepted Date: 2026-05

Context

Camera retention is a regulated matter in most jurisdictions. Different markets have different defaults and limits:

  • Argentina (AAIP general): Resolución 4/2019 suggests 30 days as a guideline, longer requires justification.
  • CABA (Buenos Aires city): Ley 5.688 allows up to 60 days for surveillance in public spaces.
  • BCRA (banking): 90 days minimum for banking sector branches.
  • Spain (LOPDGDD): 30 days max default, deletion required after.
  • France (CNIL): 30 days default, longer with justification.
  • Germany (BDSG): 14 days is the recommended baseline, longer requires DPIA.

Setting a permissive default (e.g., 90 days) gives more flexibility to operators but defaults are sticky — operators rarely change them, and a permissive default in Argentina would put deployments out of compliance with AAIP guidance by default.

Decision

The first-boot wizard sets retention based on country selection:

Country Default Presets available
Argentina 30 d 60 d (CABA), 90 d (BCRA), 14 d (minimal)
Spain 30 d 14 d, 60 d (with justification)
France 30 d 14 d, 60 d
Germany 14 d 7 d, 30 d (with DPIA)
Italy 7 d 14 d, 30 d (Garante exception)

For Argentina specifically: 30 days is the default.

Per-camera override is supported in Frigate config. The wizard step that sets retention also notes the regulatory basis ("AAIP general guideline") so operators understand they're picking a regulatory profile, not just a number.

Consequences

Good:

  • Out-of-the-box compliance for the most common Argentine deployment.
  • Operators are informed about regulatory basis, not just numbers.
  • Sales material can claim "compliant by default in Argentina/EU".

Bad / trade-offs:

  • 30 days isn't the right default for every Argentine deployment (e.g., banking would prefer 90). Mitigated by the preset selector.
  • Country selection at first boot is a strong commitment that affects later decisions; operators rarely change it.

See also

  • docs/06-legal/retention-argentina.md
  • docs/06-legal/retention-eu.md