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Mildly Infuriating
Home to all things "Mildly Infuriating" Not infuriating, not enraging. Mildly Infuriating. All posts should reflect that.
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It's just good to get something in this website for casual viewing whilst refreshing original content is added overtime.
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What else can the EU do? They can't force an American company to follow EU regulation outside of the EU.
Edit: oh damn I read your comment wrong. I read it as "It’s pretty sad that the EU seems to only care about the privacy of its own citizens." To that I'd say get your own regulation, but that's exactly what you called for. Nvm then.
Ninja edit: Nevermind, I completely misunderstood the comment I responded to.
The EU is doing all they can here. They require EU citizens need a way to have their data deleted, within 1 month or after a response with specific reasons within 3 months.
This ofc makes companies act like this for accounts located inside the EU. Then further, every EU citizen outside the EU has a right to this too, so if a company chooses to geolock the deletion feature, all those outside citizens act as a minefield and strain on the system until they stop geolocking the feature.
This then means everyone (EU citizens or not) can manually contact support, both straining their system and making them look into making this process as difficult as possible. This will inevitably lead to them blocking actual EU citizens outside the EU, who can then sue them until they stop locking the feature and make it available to everyone. The company can't just ask for some legal document proving citizenship either, since that itself would be a gdpr violation. So the end state has to be a system that everyone can use - EU citizen or not.
The EU can't demand anything about non-citizens, so as I see it this is the best they can do, by demanding certain rights only to their citizens. The downside is it may take years and a few court battles, but the final state should be the law applying for all users.
They can't send data from the EU to hoard in America in the first place and considering they have headquarters in Ireland and data centers all over the show it's not like the EU does not have plenty of recourse.