Comment by HeatrayEnjoyer

4 months ago

What does that have to do with anything? Brazilian law is quite clear. Whatever someone thinks the internet "was" or was not is immaterial.

Well if we agree that it's reasonable that a company needs to have staff in a country it operates in, then you'd need to have staff in every country to operate. That seems unreasonable to me.

  • Why is that unreasonable?

    Within my lifetime that wasn't even physically possible.

    • > Why is that unreasonable?

      I'd argue that if applied as a universal principle, then:

      * It would make it even harder specifically for smaller companies, who don't have ~200 employees to position one in each country, to get started online. If for instance you're an independent designer based in Luxembourg, maybe making fonts or website templates, would you only be allowed to sell to other people in Luxembourg?

      * It would likely segment the Internet, and render much of it inaccessible to anyone living in smaller countries, because realistically most websites aren't going to bother with all countries.

      * The intended goal, that websites would more likely bend to local law because they have employees there to be imprisoned/punished if they don't, seems questionable to me in the first place. In many cases the demands they'd be caving to would be "remove anti-government content" or "give us the IP and phone number of this journalist".

      > Within my lifetime that wasn't even physically possible.

      The world is not as it was before the takeoff of the Internet, and trying to revert back would be "unreasonable" to many.

      In this case Rumble is a business model that didn't exist pre-Internet, and has to compete with Amazon/Google which have global availability (or close to it). Just because brick-and-mortar stores used to manage does not make it feasible for businesses like Rumble.

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Why should an American/Canadian company care what the law is in some third world country?