Comment by palata
15 hours ago
> The problem lies in enforcement. Unless you are a huge player, there is almost nil chance you're gonna get fined.
I am curious: why is that difficult? Define the fine as a percentage of the revenue of the company, have users report links, and pay someone to check the link and send the fine.
Sounds like easy money... I mean it's very profitable to pay people to check parking lots and fine drivers who don't follow the regulations. This should be even more profitable?
If I am business outside Europe, why would I send Europe what my revenue is?
I don't know — why do businesses outside Europe care about GDPR compliance at all? They could just track Europeans all they want to, without any cookie banners.
Tbh most do. It makes sense only for big companies with a multinational presence.
But admitting you are subject to the laws of a country/entity is one thing, sending them your books (when your company is not based there) is kind of on a different level