|
|
|
|
|
by roel_v
2953 days ago
|
|
Such TOS would most likely be 'unduely onerous' or whatever the local term for this concept is in other EU jurisdictions. I've said this many times here already, but law is not a closed rule based decision tree. Intent matters, and laws are written in a way that they can be interpreted so that their meaning can be adapted to new circumstances or different times. Now, I'm not going to argue about whether that's how it should be (because that's such a trite 1L discussion), but it's a fact that it is. So no, that's not how it works. |
|
So the EU regulators can say my TOS have to allow EU citizens to access my site and my site must follow the GDPR.
That seems unlikely, and the fact that there's so much ambiguity around this is why so many websites are opting to block the EU rather than dealing with it.