Document Analysis NLP IA
WORDS
WORDS
Reading Time
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sentiment
Sentiment0.092449874686717
redaction
Subjectivity0.67424812030075
Affirmation0.34782608695652
Highlights
FREQ, RAKE or TFIDF
ORG
PERSON
PRODUCT
OTHER
- General Data Protection RegulationTreaty100
- Google, Inc.SoftwareCompany100
- Brave Browser50
- United KingdomCountry50
- companyCompany100
- lawAcademic100
- competitionEvent66
- competitive advantage53
- Consumer Protection53
Summary (IA Generated)
The team behind Brave Browser thinks that Google has an unfair competitive advantage due to its massive trove of user data.
In a submission filed with the United Kingdom’s consumer protection agency, Brave argued that the country’s failure to enforce European data protection laws gives Google an unfair advantage.Brave’s stanceIn an interview with Cointelegraph, Dr. Johnny Ryan, Brave’s chief policy and industry relations officer, insisted that it’s not about the competition between Chrome and Brave, but enforcing the laws that protect consumers:“RTB is the biggest data breach in the world, personal data are being broadcasted to thousands of companies.” This is a response to the U.K.’s Competition and Market Authority’s concern that enforcing the GDPR would give an additional advantage to Google because of the massive amounts of data it collects through its numerous services.Vigorous enforcement of GDPR is fairHowever, Dr. Ryan insists that the right approach is “a vigorous and robust enforcement” of the law that goes beyond real-time-bidding. The General Data Protection Regulation prohibits a major tech company from sharing user data across different arms of its business. He further notices that if the authorities don’t do their job, “We may take them to court!’
Source (Full Content Here)
Brave Browser Wants the UK to Use GDPR to Crack Down on Google