Comment on Surprise EU rollback of 'GDPR' digital-rights rules prompts alarm
ag10n@lemmy.world 18 hours agoBecause laws are supposed to have teeth and consequences There is zero doubt that everything public on the internet or otherwise is consumed and aggregated by these companies; you still don’t understand why weakening regulations benefits them?
FaceDeer@fedia.io 18 hours ago
So you are saying that weakening these regulations makes it easier for these companies to train AI on that data?
That's exactly what I've been saying all along too. I'm not sure what you think is being argued about here, or what you think I'm not understanding.
ag10n@lemmy.world 18 hours ago
You’re the one asking questions about changing it
It’s clear that weaker regulations allow them to do more with impunity as I originally stated
FaceDeer@fedia.io 18 hours ago
No I'm not, I was explaining why I thought they changed it. You appeared to be arguing that there was some other reason, so I was asking what you thought that reason was.
As it turns out, though, you're saying they changed it for exactly the same reasons I said they were changing it. To let them more easily train AI on that data. So that leaves me wondering what exactly the point of all this was.
ag10n@lemmy.world 18 hours ago
I suggest you revisit each response where you asked a question and let me know the count
All data on the internet is crawled and farmed. Weakening regulations doesn’t change this behaviour, just makes it legal