| I did not get 15M USD fine for Google Analytics on my blog. Instead, I am working for state agencies that are shy of using even locally installed Mamoto for web analytics, out of fear to collect too much PIIs because of GDPR. It is a daily tax on my mental sanity and a real problem for fellow citizens because of worsened service. GDPR had two effects on the industry in EU: 1. Chilling effect. None wants to do things with GDPR considerations. Better mine bitcoins. 2. Grilling effect. There is a proliferation of DPO jobs and people landing in these jobs are making everyone's life harder because they are incompetent by definition but still want to ascertain their fake jobs and cushy salary. I looked at your other comments and your profile and I see that you have a vested interest in software lifecycle management. CRA will help grow its visibility for sure. You probably conflate your personal goals with this intellectual discussion. Still, the overwhelming majority on HN is aware of GDPR, knows at least tangentially how poorly written EU directives are and how much depends on the public opinion and "policy". It's obvious that if CPA gets adopted, it will go pretty much the same path: 1. Lobbyists will seed FUD 2. Businesses will over-protect and waste precious resources 3. Hobbyists will loose 4. The stated goal will not be achieved. |
Regarding the ad hominem part, I invite you to watch https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Gv2I7qTux7g to understand why I think our industry needs to elevate the level of our craft. And also please take a look at the actual requirements CRA puts on devs in https://eur-lex.europa.eu/resource.html?uri=cellar:864f472b-... (pages 2 and 3 – yes, just those two pages* plus requirements on documentation on page 8, which could be a bit more annoying than the requirements on pp. 2 and 3). I hope you will find them reasonable for the most part.
Regarding GDPR, I am indeed sad that so many people interpret it incorrectly. This happens in part due to the influence of various groups, as you say. I invite you to read the blog of https://noyb.eu/en to understand the spirit of GDPR (indeed, there is a thing called "data minimization" that could be the reason you find it difficult to collect more data without a solid justification; in a fun twist, §1(3)(e) of the CRA annex also mentions data minimization) and see that the progress is made slowly yet steadily. If you noticed big websites recently show the option to deny tracking cookies directly instead of "manage cookies", you got these folks to thank ( https://noyb.eu/en/where-did-all-reject-buttons-come ). BTW, I donate to them and think they are doing awesome work.
* unless you are doing "serious stuff" (TM) as described on pages 5 and 6.