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As far as I understand it I thought even old forums were subject to this, or anywhere there's "peer to peer content"
That's why it was so dangerous, because big companies would comply to avoid the fine but smaller companies would literally go bankrupt
Yes, but the rinky-dink site needs to also have either a majority UK users, or be focused on the UK market to qualify (per my understanding). Otherwise, globally all forum sites would just fold up because the UK has a stupid law? Why does, for example, Ridgelineownersclub.com/forums need to go offline when the Honda Ridgeline isn't even sold in the UK?
A lot of small and local news sites in the US, still to this day, just block European IPs because they don't feel like doing GDPR compliance. The UK version costs money to meet compliance, so I can't see this going well for anyone over the long term.
They can just block access from any UK based IP address and carry on as normal. Like many of them are doing already, including some Lemmy instances (although funnily enough, not lemmynsfw).
Lemmy keeps shitting itself for me, refusing to load anything at all. Im out of the loop on tech for a long time so I cant figure out what's wrong with it, but every time it does it I think "oh this is it, they've just said fuck the uk"