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by auganov 1931 days ago
Did I have to deal with these popups before GDPR? No. Was I blocked from accessing many US sites before GDPR? No.

If EU cancels GDPR would everything go back to normal? Probably.

As an unhappy consumer, that's all I need to know. The cause and effect is pretty obvious here.

Sure, some people may be happy (I hope?!) with whatever privacy benefits GDPR is supposed to bring about. But blaming websites for responding to EU regulation one way or another, doesn't make me, who doesn't care about these supposed benefits, feel any better. If GDPR people feel like this is a cost worth paying then so be it. I certainly don't believe more enforcement will somehow make companies come up with fewer legal derisking strategies.

1 comments

That's a bit like complaining about street lights, because thieves now have to accost you, where previously they'd just punch you in the dark and steal your money without you knowing what happened, or who did it.

GDPR forced bad actors on the Internet to document their bad behavior openly. If this made your overall Internet experience worse, it should reveal to you the magnitude of the problem of surveillance capitalism.