Glad-Driver-24

Glad-Driver-24 t1_iyays3b wrote

They literally will. You wanna know why? Because literally no company has done it. Every US company, even those that don't even target EU users like US news sites block EU IP addresses because they don't want to comply with GDPR.

The US and UK/EU are not lawless lands, they comply heavily with each other. Imagine if copyright law was incompatible between the two.

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Glad-Driver-24 t1_iyaydnq wrote

Tell me genius, how are you supposed to target UK/EU users with relevant ads without explicitly being in the UK/EU? Do you honestly think that you, as a company, are going to be able to collect data from users in the UK/EU and not have any kind of repercussions? You're in the US, not Iran.

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Glad-Driver-24 t1_iya535l wrote

I genuinely can't tell if you're being serious or not. To profit in the UK/EU (which Twitter does) you need to be registered there and follow their rules. They're not going to let you serve UK/EU users and have no control over that. Welcome to the 21st century. America also has this right for foreign companies that operate in their borders and they use it often (for example, TikTok).

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Glad-Driver-24 t1_iufrejj wrote

>in comparison to cyber punk

As I said in my comment, yes. However, they still were not in a state to be released to the general public.

>that's pretty normal for any game nowadays.

Both Witcher 1 and 2 had "enchanced editions" that literally came out one year after they released and fixed issues like loading times, bugs and graphical issues. That's not normal.

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