GDPR, CNIL: the observation of failure

GDPR, CNIL: the observation of failure

The personal data of the French are more looted than ever, the European actors of the Adtech are massacred, the GAFA are aware of their power.Technocracy killed European tech.

Happy birthday !It was a little over five years ago, already.On May 24, 2016, the GDPR came into force, for an application two years later.The technocrats who laid it had promised us a thousand wonders.Europe would become a "new continent" of respecting personal data for the good of all of its citizens, which would create a new whole part of the economy, allow the development of thousands of start-ups, everythingin (gnark gnark) bouting out of our borders the wicked gafa.A dream of technocrat sold to those who wanted to believe it. Il y a d'ailleurs un village Potemkine où tout semble aller pour le mieux pour les données personnelles : le 3 Place de Fontenoy dans le chic 7e arrondissement de Paris, le siège de la Cnil.If this organization was lucid, he would take stock of five years of personal data regulation and would write this in his annual balance sheet:

What had to do?Perhaps the only thing that worked in the history of industry.Let our European companies develop before imposing regulations.Make world behemoths, allowing us to conquer instead of being conquered.This is what Americans do.And when their companies are very strong, they regulate them and tax them.This is the case right now.The digital losers in Europe (like Mr. Jourdain they are losers but have not understood it) delight in it by thinking "that's it, the GAFA will bite the dust".Not grasping that, for the Americans, regulating a business is to note that it has crushed all its competitors and that there is nothing more to win.If the USA regulate your American competitor, it is because you are dead, even if you do not know it yet.To "regulate" the GAFA in Europe it was enough to let the development of European competitors who would have bitten their market shares instead of killing these competitors with Kafkai regulations in the egg.

RGPD, Cnil : le constat de l'échec

Digital third-world

The RGPD's assessment is scary.Those responsible for it will have to account.Obviously our good technocrats have a good game of telling us "everything is fine".Stuffed with debts, subsidies, our European companies seem to be doing perfectly, seen from the Potemkin village of the CNIL.In reality their market shares collapse, their margin rates are two or even three times lower than their American counterparts.35 years ago, the situation was exactly the same between American industrial companies and their Soviet equivalents.On the one hand of important margins, efficient products, a global conquest.On the other, the bureaucracy which had crushed the economic room for maneuver, a patent ineffectiveness, no technological leadership.We are told that Europe also produced unicorns.Certainly there are a few but the truth is that most do not manage to export to other continents.Why ?Because their "success" often comes from their exploitation of the European administrative millefeuille which, not existing elsewhere, cannot be exploited elsewhere.

The citizen, he was due because he was made to believe that the "bad guys" were the companies eager for data.And that it would be protected by all these regulations provided that technocrats are given to the sirens of technocrats.We have maintained a paranoia unfounded around personal data: I don't care that France knows where I will go on vacation.But we have carefully "forgotten" to say in parallel that the price to pay for all these regulations would be the death of our tech industry and the door open to the tech industry in which our laws have no scope and which goUse our personal data.Without any framework.The collapses are not clear little by little but suddenly, one day.That day we will see the result of years and years of technocracy and the USSITION of European tech.We will then be definitively relegated to vacation and handbag manufacturers.The digital third world.We have lost.

RGPD, Cnil : le constat de l'échec

Happy birthday !It was a little over five years ago, already.On May 24, 2016, the GDPR came into force, for an application two years later.The technocrats who laid it had promised us a thousand wonders.Europe was going...

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