| Please tone down the hyperbolic rhetoric and FUD. Consider how strongly you can make your point without them. To the point: Nobody in Europe is "dictating terms to the world", or "issuing diktats", meaning passing citizen-supported legislation I guess, or affecting your business, unless you're trying to deal with their citizens' data. > The diktats I mentioned include a ruling that Google Fonts are illegal now. So if I’m using those, or I’m using Google Analytics, and a European happens across my site, I’m now a criminal? No, because website operators have at least 4 more options: 1. Don't process EU citizen data (block them). 2. Don't track users, period (host the font on the site instead). 3. Don't track users until they log in (convert them). 4. Get users' informed consent (let them know that they'll be tracked on the site due to the choice of google fonts instead of hosting a font). Wow, that wasn't scary at all! The general attitude I'm getting from some folks, though, is that they want to do anything they want to users without consequence and never change. This attitude is going lead to a lot of anguish. Others have rights, too, and they override our right to do whatever we want to them, in many cases. |
> 1. Don't process EU citizen data (block them).
Many webmasters have neither the time nor inclination to read up on EU law. So blocking is the easiest and safest solution to minimize our legal risks. This is absolutely terrible - I grew up dreaming of an internet that is really humanity's network; not islands separated by political allegiance.
I agree that I can tone it down, but 99.99% of the FUD around is directly the fault of the EU for not making it crystal clear what the theory and practice around their internet laws will be.