Europe’s GDPR privacy law is headed for red tape bonfire within ‘weeks’ (www.politico.eu)
from schizoidman@lemm.ee to technology@lemmy.world on 03 Apr 2025 12:40
https://lemm.ee/post/60267722

cross-posted from: lemm.ee/post/60263799

Europe’s most famous technology law, the GDPR, is next on the hit list as the European Union pushes ahead with its regulatory killing spree to slash laws it reckons are weighing down its businesses.

The European Commission plans to present a proposal to cut back the General Data Protection Regulation, or GDPR for short, in the next couple of weeks. Slashing regulation is a key focus for Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, as part of an attempt to make businesses in Europe more competitive with rivals in the United States, China and elsewhere.

#technology

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UnfortunateShort@lemmy.world on 03 Apr 2025 12:45 next collapse

The GDPR is definitely neither wits end, nor applied reasonably under all circumstances. I have my doubts that these “cutbacks” will be the adequate reforms however.

ctrl_alt_esc@lemmy.ml on 03 Apr 2025 13:02 collapse

These cutbacks are completely stupid imho. The EU is undoing decades of good work by jumping on this dumb deregulation band wagon. I guess it was always run by a bunch of neoliberals…

njordomir@lemmy.world on 03 Apr 2025 16:23 collapse

As someone with a lot of time spent in Europe and the US over the last 30-40 years, it seems like Europe is often happy to jump on the bandwagon of America, they just want someone else to go first. I also think American music and cultural exports are spreading our cultural degeneracy around the world for a long time and Germans slurp it up. I really hope the better education system will immunize them against the worst of it, but the rise of the AfD makes me doubt.

corsicanguppy@lemmy.ca on 03 Apr 2025 22:03 next collapse

happy to jump on the bandwagon of America, they just want someone else to go first

Like an engine that runs on FOMO?

Appoxo@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 04 Apr 2025 06:38 collapse

lol.
With the current trend I feel like the neonazis AfD will put us right back to Temu-Hitler (Trump) and Putin.

InverseParallax@lemmy.world on 03 Apr 2025 12:48 next collapse

The GDPR is one of the regulations that actually seems to help on a daily basis.

23andMe is going bankrupt and now a good part of the US is having their DNA sold to the highest bidder.

kami@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 03 Apr 2025 13:25 next collapse

Stay one step ahead of the enemies and protect your privacy now, fellow Europeans.

gedaliyah@lemmy.world on 03 Apr 2025 13:36 next collapse

Cool, money is more important than freedom anyway./s

Dragonstaff@leminal.space on 03 Apr 2025 18:45 collapse

Europe needs to follow the USian example. Shining city on a hill and all that. Get rid of all of your regulations and protections and Europe will be as great again as America! 🤡

Engywuck@lemm.ee on 03 Apr 2025 14:06 next collapse

Well, maybe they’ll get rid of the cookies banners /s.

taladar@sh.itjust.works on 03 Apr 2025 15:17 next collapse

Cookie banners are completely unnecessary as long as websites only use cookies for technically necessary purposes (e.g. login). The problem is that a lot of websites want to sell your data to hundreds or thousands of other companies. So yeah, we could cut back a lot of red tape there if we just outright banned that sale of data completely.

Zak@lemmy.world on 03 Apr 2025 21:08 collapse

A problem is that some sites that don’t need cookie banners use them anyway due to a poor understanding of the law and excess of caution.

callcc@lemmy.world on 04 Apr 2025 05:57 collapse

Cookie banners are not mandated by GDPR. It’s an unrelated piece of law.

Engywuck@lemm.ee on 04 Apr 2025 06:43 collapse

Too bad :-(

sunzu2@thebrainbin.org on 03 Apr 2025 14:45 next collapse

Which oligarchs are pushing for this...

Shit like this doesn't just happen on their own.

GnuLinuxDude@lemmy.ml on 03 Apr 2025 15:02 next collapse

I’m not European and even I despise von der Leyen. She’s one of the most cynical people on Earth.

j4yt33@feddit.org on 03 Apr 2025 20:37 collapse

Not surprising, since she was a big figure in the German conservative party. They’re all terrible human beings

x00z@lemmy.world on 03 Apr 2025 17:38 next collapse

It’s super easy to be GDPR compliant. It just costs money.

Wobble@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 03 Apr 2025 18:23 collapse

Especially if youre actively making it much more difficult to implement than is necessary!

x00z@lemmy.world on 03 Apr 2025 19:56 collapse

In theory you just need to have a way for people to contact you, like an email address. And then when you get an email you just need to handle their data according to the GDPR rules.

I have a website with user data and I’m perfectly GDPR compliant, just by having an email address available for contact and manually deleting their data if they ask for it.

TheFonz@lemmy.world on 03 Apr 2025 19:06 next collapse

GDPR is a good goal, but the implementation is hell. There has to be a way to make well intentioned policies not turn into the nightmare fuel that it inevitably always turns into.

corsicanguppy@lemmy.ca on 03 Apr 2025 20:56 next collapse

When my nephew was young, it was impossible for him to go to bed on time. Just impossible! He tried nothing and it didn’t help! Please tell me that’s not what’s happening to the GDPR.

heavydust@sh.itjust.works on 04 Apr 2025 05:28 collapse

Implementation is easy. It requires respect for human beings though.

TheFonz@lemmy.world on 04 Apr 2025 06:04 collapse

It my personal experience I found it all extremely convoluted… And I like gdpr

xektop@lemmy.world on 03 Apr 2025 20:18 next collapse

What?!? Please no! Can someone explain to me how this will help the businesses, because I don’t see the downsides from GDPR?

WhyJiffie@sh.itjust.works on 04 Apr 2025 03:56 collapse

they’ll be able to use our data in capitalist pig mode

Amoxtli@thelemmy.club on 03 Apr 2025 21:39 next collapse

I have a blocklist just for that.

qevlarr@lemmy.world on 04 Apr 2025 05:35 next collapse

Ban privacy invasive business practices instead of putting the burden on citizens to opt in/opt out. This is about rights of a European citizen not to be constantly under surveillance, not about consumers rights to sign away our rights in a contract.

SheenSquelcher@lemm.ee on 04 Apr 2025 07:10 collapse

So dumbing it down then? If privacy and security is built into your product and you’re not using people’s data for nefarious purposes its very easy to comply with.