|
|
|
|
|
by jacobolus
2425 days ago
|
|
This is no different than anything else. All sorts of unethical and exploitative arrangements are helpful for small firms’ bottom line, but easier to handle properly with larger scale. Dumping toxic byproducts in the river. Forcing employees to work unpaid overtime. Keeping fraudulent books and evading taxes. Selling illegally dangerous products. Not following local building codes. Facilitating third-party fraud or money laundering... Being a small business should not be license to do whatever you want, irrespective of the harm to customers, business partners, or others in the society. In the case of data protection specifically, companies (perhaps especially small companies) are very cavalier with all sorts of data including personally identifiable information, financial information, communications, ...., and this causes serious harms when that data is misused directly or stolen by/leaked to/sold to someone who misuses it. If a company cannot afford to stay in business while treating data carefully, then perhaps they should not be in business. |
|
So what you're really saying is, if a company cannot afford to stay in business while navigating a legal framework designed for companies the size of Google, then perhaps they should not be in business. The result of which would be to have only companies the size of Google.