Forget all the stuff out there that says the GDPR protects EU citizens. This is a question of jurisdiction and enforcement. Say I run a blog under a business registered in the US funded by advertisers in the US. A EU citizen that comments on posts issues a GDPR request that I ignore. Their government fines me. I tell them to get bent, I am out of their jurisdiction. What can they do at that point?

  • neanderthal@lemmy.worldOP
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    1 year ago

    I am a US citizen, I know how our laws are made, and find the explanation a little condescending, but this is the best answer so far that there is a treaty about it. I couldn’t find that anywhere. Thanks.

        • AvaddonLFC ☄️ 🤘@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          Please see rule 7 and keep in mind that harrassing another individual member will not be taken lightly. Please do not repeat this kind of language. Thank you.

          • nrezcm@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            Dudes handle is literally neanderthal. To my knowledge the last neanderthals died out a long time ago and there are no direct descendants but go a head and warn me for ‘vocally harassing’ someone.

      • Itty53@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        No he didn’t. The context was “as a US citizen” per the post. You gave him a 6th grade civics lesson about how bills turn into laws a-la school house rock before even sort of addressing the question. The next step would’ve been explaining what laws even are.

        That’s a little condescending, assuming a citizen of a nation doesn’t know how their own laws are created. It isn’t a LOT condescending but it is a little.

    • FlowVoid@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      There is no treaty. And the GDPR is not “law” in the US. You cannot sue a company for damages in the US like in the EU.

      However, there is an executive order that allows you to file a complaint if you think your privacy rights have been violated.

      You can find a good explainer here.