CEO/Principal Consultant at INNOQ, he/him, software architect, RESTafarian, conference tourist. Works at innoq.com. Fediverse: @stilkov@innoq.social

Germany
Joined April 2007
My assumption is that it will be resolved like all trade issues are, by painful and tedious negotiations. Both sides will have to give up something because neither side wants that to happen.
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Replying to @mjpt777
Congrats, Martin! Fantastic news.
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Argh. Have you read the “better protections” part? *That* is the point.
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Do you actually believe the reason for GDPR’s existence is to defend EU companies against US tech giants? Or whose power grab, exactly, are we talking about?
That’s about as justified as me saying your opinion doesn’t count because of who your employer is.
Now I don’t have the same problem with Google (even though I’m not a heavy user), but the principle is the right one. Because it’s my data, what you’re allowed do with it is my decision, not yours.
Let’s take Facebook as an example. I avoid them, that’s why I don’t visit their site. If I visit yours, I definitely expect you to not send data about my visits to them. That’s why GDPR requires you to ask for my consent before you do so.
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Or as the article says: “These data privacy judgments complicate how websites and applications can integrate remotely hosted content or services by requiring a legitimate purpose for doing so if personal data gets transferred or lawful consent.” Yes, definitely a good thing.
Yes, but that does not mean PII can’t be hosted in the US. It means you can’t give your users’ PII to 3rd parties without their consent, which is a good thing in my book
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I don’t see how you derive at that interpretation. Can you point to a court ruling that supports this? Schrems 2 alone doesn’t.
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There is no problem storing data outside of the EU if GDPR standards are met. Switzerland, Iceland, Australia are some examples. I know it might be surprising from a US perspective, but there might be a need to change because of laws made by non-US citizens
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Boah… Wenn ich die Ausrede lese, dass unfertige Software unter Realbedingungen getestet werden soll, kriege ich als Agilist der ersten Stunden einen Hals…
Replying to @LilithWittmann
Dem Wortlaut entnehme ich, dass das @BMBF_Bund das Projekt offline nehmen lies. Gut so. Des Weiteren argumentiert die Bundesdruckerei, dass das Projekt ja noch im "Testbetrieb" sei und es heute hipp sei, unfertige Software unter Realbedingungen zu testen.
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Replying to @kellabyte
Based on a very brief and probably unfair assessment: Hotwire’s statelessness is in line with Web fundamentals. Phoenix’s Liveview is a brilliantly implemented violation of those same principles.
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Replying to @svenandrae
Always a great reminder of how fucking brilliant Prince was as a guitarist
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Stefan Tilkov retweeted
Zeugnis-Blockchain der Bundesdruckerei: Erwartbar katastrophal. Die Ignoranz jeglicher Expertise für digitale Staatsprojekte muss endlich aufhören! golem.de/news/zeugnisse-in-d…
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Stefan Tilkov retweeted
Ich kann nichts dagegen machen, ich finde das einfach ein bisschen lustig. Die „Welt“ ist ein Sammelbecken für peinliche ältere Männer, die sich für rein gar nichts mehr zu schade sind.
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Stefan Tilkov retweeted
With version 98 the Chrome team experiments with a crucial change in its CORS handling: “Private Network Access”. @simkoelsch explains why and how this can affect your Intranet web app 👉 innoq.com/en/blog/cors-priva…
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Solange Maaßen und Otte noch Mitglieder der CDU sind und es keinen Unvereinbarkeinsbeschluss mit der „Werte“union gibt, sollte sich die CDU primär um die eigenen Abgrenzungsprobleme kümmern, finde ich.
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