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> I don't think it's accurate to solely blame the EU when this is in response to legislation that gives/gave the US access to all types of personal data on European citizens.

I would argue that the Americans getting better privacy protections and working with other countries instead of forcing American companies to behave illegally abroad would be a much better solution than the Europeans watering down their privacy laws.

American companies will set up independent shell companies or subsidiaries to serve European customers anyway. Microsoft and Amazon are never going to voluntary leave a market of 400M customers. Doing so would leave too much room for a competitor to grow and then threaten them. So if fragmenting the web means that Europeans get the same services as Americans, but with better privacy, then I am all for it.

Europeans are to blame for the flaws in the GDPR, not for doing their thing without the blessing of the Americans.



Maybe that's true for the Microsofts and Google's of the world. But for smaller companies trying to provide SaaS or PaaS it totally keeps them from entering the market. So in the end it only increases the difficulty to compete in EU and increases the power of these mega corps.


The recent German judgment was also about subsidiaries. If 'Meta Europe ' falls under the cloud act it isn't GDPR compliant.


It’s a simple shell game. Meta US can very well become a subsidiary of Meta Bahamas, and still get licensing fees for its brands and IP from a nominally independent Meta EU.




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