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by piva00
654 days ago
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> do you want every online business checking the passport of their customer? Is the business selling to a EU citizen? If so they have to deal with the rights that citizen has. If a company in some fictitious jurisdiction where fraud is not a crime defrauds an American citizen, should they not face American justice for it? It might be they don't have legal representation in the USA but that shouldn't stop an American citizen on bringing the issue to authorities to deal with. It's not random, if you make business with someone in the EU or deal with the information of someone in the EU then you need to follow EU's regulations. Can't do that? Don't deal with EU's citizens data or business, it's pretty simple. I really don't think this is a hard concept to grasp. |
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Imagine the reverse, if China was fining European companies for not censoring CCP-offensive terms on the internet. Or America was fining them for dealing with US-blocklisted entities like Iran.