| > How, why? (The GDPR is not effective) GDPR stated purpose is to "increase data privacy for EU citizens". It added a bunch of directives that amount to "protocol theater", but did not stop Big Tech from collecting user data at large. Facebook can only be profitable if they collect and exploit user data. If they are still operating in Europe, it is because they are either (a) operating at a loss or (b) still collecting enough user data. Google is surely still collecting user data. Want to use Google Assistant? You consented for them to listen to you. Use Gmail? You consented for them to read your messages. In practice, GDPR did not stop the data collection. Don't use Android and prefer iOS instead? Same thing. Amazon echo at home? SAME THING. Saying that you have more privacy because now you "give consent" on some websites is a ridiculously naive notion. The only way to have actual privacy would be if the companies were not allowed at all to collect the data in the first place. > How can one be a capitalist and against money(inequality) at the same time? I've posted not one, but three links to different comments, all of them explaining the argument. I'll repeat again here: I am not (morally) against the concentration of money, I am against the concentration of power, and there are easier ways to eliminate the concentration of power without removing people's civil rights. In contrast, any attempt to control the concentration of money led to authoritarianism and people losing basic liberties. |
Can you think of any regulation that you are for, against which you can not use those two arguments?
> GDPR stated purpose is to "increase data privacy for EU citizens". It added a bunch of directives that amount to "protocol theater", but did not stop Big Tech from collecting user data at large.
This is what I'm trying to get from you. What specifically makes GDPR just "protocol theater", what changes should be made to make it more than that?
> Saying that you have more privacy because now you "give consent" on some websites is a ridiculously naive notion.
Nobody but you is saying that. I'd say that you have more privacy because you "refuse consent". If websites are not honoring my choice then they are breaking the law. If that makes GDPR bad then, by that logic, all laws and regulations are bad.
> I am not (morally) against the concentration of money, I am against the concentration of power, and there are easier ways to eliminate the concentration of power without removing people's civil rights.
Money is power so saying that you are not against the concentration of money but of power.... makes no sense.
In the third post that you linked you recommend removing civil rights...