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by hansvm
990 days ago
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> Just as daft as the extra-US sites that choose to show no content to EU geolocated origins instead of complying with the law. Which is... also illegal under the letter of the law Since when? The GDPR explicitly only applies if you offer your shit to EU subjects or monitor EU subject behavior while they're in the EU. By actively rejecting those potential customers and not tracking them (because you refuse to provide them the product), does that not suffice to not have to worry about the rest of the terms? I know there are a few cases regarding linking to news articles and how the company in question can't stop providing that service, but in all such cases I'm aware of the offending company had other ties to the EU whereby the GDPR might have been enforceable. |
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