this post was submitted on 25 Nov 2024
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[โ€“] [email protected] 3 points 4 days ago* (last edited 4 days ago) (1 children)

I think you missed my point...

I am not subject to the GDPR. I don't have to abide by it. Even if my country adopted a GDPR-like regulation, that regulation would only apply to my privacy. Not yours.

Microsoft has proven themselves overtly hostile to privacy. Yours, mine, and everyone's. The available options are:

  1. Attempt to regulate them into behaving like decent human beings.

  2. Avoid their business.

When my therapist is using a system that is overtly hostile to their privacy and mine, the solution is not to ask the government to chastise their attacker. The solution is to eliminate their reliance on their attacker, and get them in a system the attacker doesn't control.

I'm not saying we should avoid GDPR-like regulation altogether. I'm saying that at the OS level, Linux is intrinsically compliant with the intent of such regulation but may not comply with the letter, if the letter requires some sort of affirmative confirmation or certification of compliance that would be complicated for the developer to implement.

Microsoft will be able to be technically compliant with the law, but will definitely subvert it's intent and purpose however it can.

Regulation will likely have chilling effects on the better option, while promoting the worse.

[โ€“] [email protected] 2 points 4 days ago

Even if my country adopted a GDPR-like regulation, that regulation would only apply to my privacy. Not yours.

That could depend on how the regulation is written, so we should push to have these new regulations cover all users of services hosted in our countries.