It truly saddens me that we're going this route. This pseudo fight for 'privacy' is frustrating and will only bring us closer to a splinternet situation.
> the data of European Internet users is therefore illegally transferred through this tool.
This isn't a devilish situation to me. We're talking about a tracking pixel, not healthcare records or trade secrets.
All that is because we aren't capable of fighting US big tech with innovation. Only with regulation. Appalling. Hopefully, Google finds a legal way around it.
You know where these tracking pixels are? Everywhere, doctors websites, ecommerce checkout pages,... - you can get a lot of very private information about someone by correlating these data points.
I believe the way around it would be to create an "full" EU subsidiary that stores the data within EU and cannot take directives from the U.S parent <- US gov. To be honest I'm really surprised that the stock market had no reaction to the recent Digital Markets Act and GDPR. Currently most of the U.S companies are in illegality. They need to restructure their business significantly. That being said I think EU is right. Why would we want our data shared with the U.S government?
I'm not sure that's really possible, is it? If your legal control over your subsidiary is sufficiently tight that your subsidiary cannot turn rogue on you (and if it doesn't turn rogue on you despite not having sufficiently close legal ties, you might effectively be forming an illegal cartel, wouldn't you?), it's presumably also sufficiently tight for the US government to act through those ties.
> the data of European Internet users is therefore illegally transferred through this tool.
This isn't a devilish situation to me. We're talking about a tracking pixel, not healthcare records or trade secrets.
All that is because we aren't capable of fighting US big tech with innovation. Only with regulation. Appalling. Hopefully, Google finds a legal way around it.