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dylan604 an hour ago

If Apple is so pro-privacy like they claim, then they'd look for the most strict international privacy laws and abide by them. Then they could feel safe in knowing they could release the product anywhere. The fact they want to make the product available under the "rules" of the least privacy protecting countries first says a lot to me

1123581321 an hour ago | parent | next [-]

DMA is a not a privacy-oriented law.

MagnumOpus 7 minutes ago | parent [-]

But Apple’s excuse not to comply with it is privacy-related.

thaumasiotes 11 minutes ago | parent | prev | next [-]

> If Apple is so pro-privacy like they claim, then they'd look for the most strict international privacy laws and abide by them. Then they could feel safe in knowing they could release the product anywhere.

Those are not equivalent statements. You're assuming that privacy is a one-dimensional quantity, so that anything that complies with "the strictest international privacy laws" automatically also complies with any other privacy laws. But this is not actually true. It can easily be the case that every national law allows some set of behavior (different sets for different legal systems), at the same time that the intersection of all those sets is empty.

JumpCrisscross an hour ago | parent | prev [-]

DMA is about competition, not privacy. Apple weren’t requesting a GDPR waiver.

inetknght an hour ago | parent [-]

So Apple doesn't want to compete? Cry me a river.

I could almost feel sympathy if it were something to do with some contract that Apple signed with their AI provider. Who's that, Google?

Ahh, a "competitor"? Yeah... cry me a river.