That is not true. You do not need to comply with any country’s laws except the one you reside in, except for treaties by your home country that say otherwise or your desire to travel abroad.
Just think of what China would do to the Internet if it could.
> You do not need to comply with any country’s laws except the one you reside in.
Unless you want to business with another country, in which case you need to follow the laws of that country when you conduct that business. Which is what I've been saying the whole time.
> Just think of what China would do to the Internet if it could.
If you want to provide a service to China you need to follow Chinese laws or they will block you using their firewall. China is a (not very nice) example of how a country has the right to decide who it does business with -- if you won't help them conduct surveillance of their citizens then they won't do business with you and will block you from doing business with their people. You might not agree with their laws or how they act, but it is their right as a sovereign nation to create their own laws.
I never said you need to follow the laws of every country in the world, and I really don't understand how so many people are reading that out of what I said (and keep saying). If you want to do business with a country you will have to obey the laws of that country. That's the way international trade has always worked.
When the business is being conducted outside the EU but the EU is enforcing GDPR, it is a problem. The GDPR is specifically written for extrajurisdictional enforcement which is a big change in the world of laws.
I am just saying that the EU will not be the only jurisdiction following this model. Be prepared.
Just think of what China would do to the Internet if it could.