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I would be doing that too, but you got to understand that other countries have other cultures, some things wil be better like free heathcare and better labour laws but other are not "as good". In europe they do control a lot of things we can access on the internet for example. If someone doesn't comply with an EU regulation they will be punished, it's not 'freedom of speach" without consequences like in the US. Also being entitled like many americans are will not work here. So like everything in life some people will be a good match for.one country and others for other countries.
I'm really curious about what you think you're not being allowed to visit on the internet.
I can't think of a single thing that's 'blocked'.
Unless you're under 13, of course, in which case I concede there are a lot of restrictions - but that's a good thing.
more.like some youtube videos or some sites that didn't comply with GPDR. It's been a while since I had a problem like this but to be fair I was just giving an example of regulations that exist to protect us, that we support, but that goes against the "american way"
GPDR does not have any site blocking provisions, just fines.
A lot of small US websites (typically regional media) choose to not show pages to EU IPs but they are not blocked.
They don't want to serve up their articles if they can't do intrusive tracking. It's a scummy practice that breaks the Web.
If you want to read the article, go to archive.is and paste in the URL.