... if somehow it was illegal for them to publish this information. Know what I mean?
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Replying to @cmuratori @galyonkin and
So I'm guessing a US-based SteamSpy would have no such restrictions, legally speaking.
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Replying to @cmuratori @galyonkin and
So long as it didn't contain data about EU citizens, yes.
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Replying to @dancer_ve @Algo_Anthill and
Even if it did, the EU would have no jurisdiction to do anything about it?
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Replying to @cmuratori @galyonkin and
That's why Long Arm Statutes exist - to extend jurisdiction in those cases.
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Replying to @dancer_ve @Algo_Anthill and
You'll have to show me that line of court cases, because I'm pretty sure not.
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Replying to @cmuratori @Algo_Anthill and
A private entity entirely in the US cannot be sued under EU privacy laws AFAIK
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Replying to @cmuratori @Algo_Anthill and
They would have to at least have some presence in the EU.
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Replying to @cmuratori @galyonkin and
Look up the US Safe Harbor regulations. It's basically "not getting sued by EU"
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Replying to @dancer_ve @Algo_Anthill and
US safe harbor regulations have literally nothing to do with this.
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That's for non-published information, and it's for publicly traded companies.
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