this post was submitted on 22 Nov 2024
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[–] schizo@forum.uncomfortable.business 7 points 7 hours ago (1 children)

Privacy regulations are all fine and dandy, but even with the strictest ones in place,

They're also subject to interpretation, regulatory capture, as well as just plain being ignored when it's sufficiently convenient for the regulators to do so.

"There ought to be a law!" is nice, but it's not a solution when there's a good couple of centuries of modern regulatory frameworks having had existed, and a couple centuries of endless examples of where absolutely none of it matters when sufficient money and power is in play.

Like, for example, the GDPR: it made a lot of shit illegal under penalty of company-breaking penalties.

So uh, nobody in the EU has had their personal data misused since it was passed? And all the big data brokers that are violating it have been fined out of business?

And this is, of course, ignoring the itty bitty little fact that you have to be aware of the misuse of the data: if some dude does some shady shit quietly, then well, nobody knows it happened to even bring action?

[–] tburkhol@lemmy.world 4 points 6 hours ago

Exactly. I'm just here to say that regulation isn't a solution to corporate malfeasance - at best it is a patch until the corp lawyers figure out where the loopholes are or how to accomplish the malfeasance in a different way.