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by Kbelicius
1467 days ago
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> Yes, that was reason enough. They were scared of lawyers knocking on their doors and shake them with the threat of lawsuits over "GDPR violations". They had zero interest in spending more money on their websites to ensure they are compliant and Facebook made it convenient for them to outsource all of this unnecessary headache. So it isn't the fault of GDPR but of stupid business owners? That is according to you. You can't think of any other reason why businesses would kill their own online presence? > I don't want to get into a tangent, but I'm yet to see a better example of how regulatory capture works in favor of Big Corporations What, specifically, about GDPR favors big corporations? Considering that it is the best example that you can thing of I'm sure that won't be hard to answer. |
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Blaming business owners for being scared from the lack of clarity of the law is ridiculous.
> What, specifically, about GDPR favors big corporations?
If regulations were truly harmful to Facebook in any way, why would Zuckerberg be calling for it?
Big corporations have armies of lawyers and can deal with all the requirements from complex pieces of legislation. They use that as a barrier against smaller sites who might try to compete with them on specific niches and use it as a protection racket against their own consumers. Thanks to GDPR, Facebook can go around the internet saying "Nice community site you have there, would be a pity if the government did anything to it..."