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by BrandoElFollito 1734 days ago
> France, apparently, is in a situation where nobody cares enough to enforce

It is strictly enforced in France. But Internet knows no borders so the statistics of votes (which is is illegal to provide in France during the voting day) are available outside of France (usually in French speaking Belgian / Swiss online newspapers, or Twitter/FB/...).

My point is that a country cannot expect that other countries (and services in these countries) will follow their rules.

> If your purpose is to signal things, being morally clean is more important than the number of votes you manage to achieve. If a law is reasonable, and a norm in multiple other well-regarded systems, it makes sense to comply.

I am not sure I understand that point.

1 comments

> It is strictly enforced in France

It’s not strictly enforced. Exit polls published outside France are collected inside France. Those who collect with clear intent to immediately publish are subject to French law, and may be fined. Which, from what you are saying, does not happen.

> I am not sure I understand that point

I am not sure how to explain it better. You should not both demand lawful election and circumvent electoral laws at the same time. You can, and people do, but it’s not a strong position.

> Those who collect with clear intent to immediately publish are subject to French law, and may be fined

Exit polls are legal. Publishing them is not. They are published by non-French entities, which cannot be fined because of some internal law of ours.

> You should not both demand lawful election and circumvent electoral laws at the same time. You can, and people do, but it’s not a strong position

The rules are from the times where information was provided by printed newspapers, radio and TV. It is time to realize that we are in a different world and adapt.

If we allow foreign newspapers to publish data (because we cannot forbid that), we should give an equal chance to the French ones.