← Back to context

Comment by tgv

3 years ago

You may be looking at this through a very narrow, heavily politicized lens.

First: GDPR is a compromise, so it's a bit uneven. That's partly due to lobbying by google and friends. Second, privacy very much needs protection. Even if you are perfectly fine giving up your privacy, other people aren't. Third: you can actually process user requests. Depending on how you do it, you don't even have to show a banner. Is that really too intrusive?

I mean, before accusing someone of looking at this politically, please read the comment fully.

You’re taking pains to explain why GDPR is a compromise? Why? If it’s bad law, it’s bad law.

Nothing you said invalidates the assertions I’ve made. Unless you’ve directly experienced the onerous system of regulations in places like Germany, I’d urge you to do more research before the armchair dismissal.

  • > If it’s bad law, it’s bad law.

    Presumably it's your opinion that it's a bad law. The majority of Europeans think it's a good law - possibly the best regulation the EU has ever promulgated.

    • Bad law for the reasons above.

      Ie, onerous toward regular businesses Ie, used to greatly expand bureaucracy and overhead Ie, used by unelected bureaucrats to wage battles of personal vendetta against specific companies instead of doing what laws do, which is set unambiguous standards for all

      22 replies →