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Comment by FMecha

7 months ago

>A fair number of sites hosted and operated outside the European Union reacted to GDPR by instituting blocks of EU users, many returning HTTP 451.

My outlook on doing this is that this is not the way to do it because these things exist:

- EU citizens living in non-EU countries (isn't GDPR supposed to apply EU citizens worldwide?)

- EU citizens using VPN with exit node to/IP address spoofing a non-EU country

Either comply with GDPR or just don't exist, period.

China or Russia also have "interesting" data protection / "let's protect children" laws. Some of they also formulated in same way as GDPR so VPN doesn't help. Why should they be ignored? (other than "but it's DIFFERENT thing, EU is good ones")