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by alwayseasy
2346 days ago
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>> Since the company doesn't do business in the EU, the GDPR can go get knotted. That's not how international law works though, especially when wielded by a large economic block. If the EU wants to put pressure on a company the pain is harsh. For instance they can blacklist the company and it's C-suite from international banking and ask any in-treaty country to extradite or arrest employees. Also are you admitting to breaking EU law and moral/ethical codes on HN ? |
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I also freely admit to breaking a lot of blasphemy laws.
None of them are laws where I live, so I won't ever get extradited.