this post was submitted on 14 Nov 2023
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What's absolutely scummy is that "laws are changing in your region" is not what happened. The law hasn't significantly changed. What has changes is that the regulator is finally enforcing the law.
Also said law doesn't allow blocking access if you don't agree to the tracking rules, so let's see where this goes.
Law opens for supplier to charge money, if necessary to support the service, which is what Meta is doing.
However, fuck Meta.
Honestly I don't disagree with that bit.
A website shouldn't be forced to operate at a loss, which is what Facebook would be doing if they couldn't strip mine data OR charge access to use the service.
The Law doesn't care if any one company's business model is viable and, Facebook being an American company which avoids taxes like crazy, EU politicians don't care enough about them specifically to change said Law.
So ultimatelly and once they exhausted all legal recourse, Facebook have only two options: "comply" or "leave" (i.e. stop operating in the EU).
Somehow I suspect that selling non-personalized adverts will still make the EU market appealing enough for Facebook to operate in an that would allow them to comply with the local laws.
To me this looks like a play by Facebook to keep their higher revenue model going as long as possibly by breaking the rules and then relying on the slowness of regulators to keep going and any two-strikes policies to avoid big fines.
Shh, people don't wanna hear that. Lol
That's not a loophole, it's a key provision of the law.
True, edited.