On 2/20/19 7:39 AM, geneb wrote:
They may have a physical presence in the EU, which
would cause the GDPR
to apply to them.? However, for companies with no physical presense in
the EU, I don't see how the law could apply.
I agree with your logic.
However your valid logic is contrary to my understanding.
I've seen reference to too many entities that don't have a presence in
the EU that are doing things like blocking EU access to websites
specifically because of GDPR.
I don't have details on /how/ GDPR applies or /why/ people in the US are
running scared of it. But I've seen many references to people doing
exactly that.
--
Grant. . . .
unix || die