Does this mean we dont get to be tracked, data mined, ad-bombed, and exploited while our teens dont get depressed and sick from “social” media?
Well, if thats the price we pay, thats the price we pay… :)
We don’t want your shitty products :)
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Apple reversed log standing design policy to put a USB C charger in the iPhone because not selling iPhones in Europe was not a financially viable option.
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Apple won’t launch their AI features in Europe because changing to comply with regulations is too hard
These features aren’t that important then I guess?
This is a total win for Europeans.
Bring more Europe to the US. Lol
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It’s too bad the websites that do this don’t have to put a label on it in the U.S. Something like “Not for consumption in the E.U.” to make people wonder what’s going on.
I’m struggling with this as a website operator. I don’t have any third-party tracking, no external assets, nothing and I’m dying to put up a cookie banner stating as such even though it’s totally unnecessary and annoying.
You do not have to put up a cookie banner when you are only using technically required ones ornnone at all. Make a dedicated cookies page in your footer and have a table with every cookie, their name, their description and use as well as how long they last.
If you have none, put that info on that page. All you need to do.
That’s what I was saying: that it isn’t required but it would be nice to advertise I’m not doing anything shady.
Great advice on the cookie listing page though. I haven’t considered that.
What’s the easiest EU country to emigrate to?
If you have no human principles, Hungary. You just have to buy some papers for it. Maybe learn a hard and useless language. But definitely love corruption and the suffering of other humans.
This is not true. You need to have years of presence OR have Hungarian ancestry and a few years less presence OR be married to a Hungarian for a couple years. Top this off with being able to know the Hungarian language.
Not if you buy the letelepedési kötvény (immigration bonds).
Other countries have a similar system. Canada for example has the Start-up Visa, which requires about C$225k investment, or the Quebec one (now suspended) which required C$1.25m over five years.
From what I can tell, the Hungarian requires somewhere between 200 and 300k EUR. This is not something that is affordable or easy to attain for the average lemmy poster. But again, this also does not guarantee citizenship, just residency.
In short, requesting a work or study visa and then trying for the citizenship test five years later, after having learned the language, is probably a much more attainable way. But still far from the easiest country to emigrate to.
Google? Yikes
Thanks for taking my joke literally and showing me a new search engine. That Google one seems pretty good. I’ve been using AltaVista and my BBS to find info but that’s way quicker.
Also, if you want to be a smart ass about it, use https://letmegooglethat.com/?q=dikfore
Also, if you want to be a smart ass about it, use https://letmegooglethat.com/?q=dikfore
There’s really no reason for you to be rude.
Why do I need a reason?
I was gonna one-up you with Lycos but as it turns out, it still works!
People are pissed but I actually liked the link, so thank you.
Sounds like it’s working to me.
Zuckbot, comply with GDPR or forget about EU.
In this case I think it’s the DMA they’re butthurt about.
The article mentions both. Meta is still complaining about GDPR.
Oh dear, how sad, never mind
If your “product” is stealing my information for your “AI” or extorting me to buy “dongles”, then please “withhold” it.
Threatening a dog with a weiner I see. That’s a bold strategy.
If the products or “products” being withheld are deemed useful by their users, you’re bound to have someone filling the gap created by the butthurt tech giants leaving. Without all the associated data vulturing.
If we’re really lucky, those replacements might even become competition for the original products outside the EU, and drive the data vultures out of business.
(Something has to go right in this timeline eventually, right?)
Capitalism at its best
I wouldn’t say “capitalism”, given that some of the alternatives filling the gap to be non-commercial in nature.
Free market economy at its best
USA only wishes we were this cool.
This is more bark than bite, imo. They’re just threatening to withhold products at this point, but as the article points out:
- Europe’s a big market and profit focused companies aren’t going to give that up just to make a point
- Those that do will just encourage European competition to step up and fill whatever gaps might appear, which is just fine by the EU.
So… go right ahead. Let’s see how this really plays out.
“Don’t threaten me with a good time”
Same argument for any case where cooperations bitch and whine about regulations.
And the products they are threatening to withhold are exactly the products we don’t want. Last time the tech giants threatened to leave entirely the EU asked when to plan the going away party. The current tactic from the giants isn’t much better
Nice! Thank you EU for the GDPR!
For the next step, please let the companies that produce software be held accountable for damages. For Nonprofits change the target to associated companies. Also punish the people responsible, like the developers, for their software and choice of used libraries. If the library was insufficiently supported by the developer, then the developer has no ground to sue for damages themselves.
Also punish the people responsible, like the developers, for their software and choice of used libraries.
What??
Could they withhold their existence while we’re at it?..
Corpo propaganda at it again…
I
You might think that but you’re missing cool thing like, ah… the metaverse…?
Oh… no… please… do not do that…
Anyways