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297 points rntn | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0s | source
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rockemsockem ◴[] No.44608323[source]
I'm surprised that most of the comments here are siding with Europe blindly?

Am I the only one who assumes by default that European regulation will be heavy-handed and ill conceived?

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notyourwork ◴[] No.44610625[source]
What is bad about heavy handed regulation to protect citizens?
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marginalia_nu ◴[] No.44610707[source]
A good example of how this can end up with negative outcomes is the cookie directive, which is how we ended up with cookie consent popovers on every website that does absolutely nothing to prevent tracking and has only amounted to making lives more frustrating in the EU and abroad.

It was a decade too late and written by people who were incredibly out of touch with the actual problem. The GDPR is a bit better, but it's still a far bigger nuisance for regular European citizens than the companies that still largely unhindered track and profile the same.

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zizee ◴[] No.44611073[source]
So because sometimes a regulation misses the mark, governments should not try to regulate?
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1. JumpCrisscross ◴[] No.44611185{3}[source]
I think OP is criticising blindly trusting the regulation hits the mark because Meta is mad about it. Zuckerberg can be a bastard and correctly call out a burdensome law.