> By guiding their business to be compliant and privacy-conscious.
That doesn't solve any issues. The cost isn't knowing how to be compliant, but all the operations required for compliance. Even if they have a business model that is 100% compliant, they still have to account for the large costs of reporting and certifying the compliance.
For example, replying to all those letters that OP mentioned.
This is the very sector that has only achieved its current status by automating away the menial tasks that you claim will overwhelm them. If humans can figure out how to make two rockets land autonomously and concurrently, I don't really see us getting tripped up on this one.
> This is the very sector that has only achieved its current status by automating away the menial tasks that you claim will overwhelm them. If humans can figure out how to make two rockets land autonomously and concurrently, I don't really see us getting tripped up on this one.
Guess you didn't read my first comment, did you? Facebook and Google will be fine, as they are big enough to automate this. Smaller companies, especially local ones, won't.
I can make the very same retort to you: In a separate post, I said that solving these sorts of "burden of compliance" problems has continually defined the successful players of the internet industry for the last quarter century. I don't argue they've solved them all, nor that they don't fall prey to regulation themselves. The extent to which companies start wilting under this burden will also be the extent other companies will address those pain points like they always have, with machines that don't get stressed out because their data and requirements grew faster than they could.
That doesn't solve any issues. The cost isn't knowing how to be compliant, but all the operations required for compliance. Even if they have a business model that is 100% compliant, they still have to account for the large costs of reporting and certifying the compliance.
For example, replying to all those letters that OP mentioned.