| > It will operate as a subsidiary company based in Europe. That means it's 100% subject to European law, not American law. As a subsidiary company, does Amazon retain operational control over that branch? If so, it's subject to the CLOUD act, and therefore, not compatible with EU rules. > Amazon remains the owner and controls the technology, yes. So, basically, the answer is that the EU subsidiary is not independent. Consider Lavabit's story, the US admin would have no issue asking Amazon to trojanize their tech. > their reputation will be forever ruined That happened 20 years ago. > It's not in Amazon's corporate self-interest to allow a back door like that. They wouldn't have a say in the matter. |
I'm assuming the CLOUD act is the entire reason why they're explicitly going with European-only staff.
That way Amazon can honestly say it has no operational control to violate EU law because there's no American employee they can command.
Operational control isn't all-or-nothing. European employees will do whatever Amazon tells them unless it breaks European law, in which case they won't. Amazon is intentionally setting it up in a way that it won't be able to do anything about that.