The EU's regulatory approach is getting interesting. Turns out building products that users actually enjoy using might now violate some compliance framework or other. It's the kind of policy irony you'd expect—stricter rules intended to protect consumers end up making it harder to create engaging experiences. Welcome to the new era of regulated innovation.
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pvt_key_collector
· 14h ago
The EU's regulatory approach really stifles innovation; things users want have become violations instead. It's hilarious.
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GateUser-1a2ed0b9
· 14h ago
The EU's approach is really clever, but it ends up stifling good products.
This is a classic case of policy shooting itself in the foot—protecting consumers ends up weakening innovation.
The stricter the regulation, the harder innovation becomes—it's a well-placed irony.
The compliance framework has blocked all the good stuff—who can withstand that?
So-called consumer protection ultimately forces everyone to settle for mediocrity—what a relief.
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OnChainDetective
· 14h ago
This EU framework is really impressive. It seems to protect consumers, but in reality, it stifles innovation... The same goes for on-chain transfers, where a bunch of compliance requirements directly choke liquidity.
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GasFeeLover
· 14h ago
A one-size-fits-all regulatory approach is really outrageous; good products end up being classified as violations. I truly don't understand the logic behind the EU's approach.
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LonelyAnchorman
· 14h ago
One-size-fits-all regulation stifles innovation. The EU's approach is a classic example of moral coercion, under the guise of protecting consumers, but it ends up killing good products.
The EU's regulatory approach is getting interesting. Turns out building products that users actually enjoy using might now violate some compliance framework or other. It's the kind of policy irony you'd expect—stricter rules intended to protect consumers end up making it harder to create engaging experiences. Welcome to the new era of regulated innovation.