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Huge international US-based companies tend to comply with EU laws just fine (or at least participate in the judicial process) if they are doing business there.

Whatsapp can choose to assign resources to this issue, or it can ignore it and let it solve itself. If Whatsapp thinks that Brazil is an interesting market for whatever it is selling (what are they selling?) or if it is good for PR then they may choose to seek ways to intervene.



> Huge international US-based companies tend to comply with EU laws just fine

When they are operating their business within the EU, yes. For example US companies operating servers in the EU must comply with EU data protection laws regarding information on those servers. This situation is analogous. WhatsApp's servers are in the US so US law applies. If the servers were in the EU then EU law would apply, not Brazilian law.


US companies operating servers in the EU must comply with EU data protection laws regarding information on those servers.

More accurately, US companies processing personal data of EU citizens must comply with EU data protection laws. It just so happens that locating the servers in the EU is among the easiest ways to comply with that.


Right, because the personal information is being transmitted outside the EU. Even if it's from a browser in the EU to a server in the US, that still counts. It's still an activity taking place in the EU.

The Brazilian case isn't about data transmission though. WhatsApp isn't in breach of any rules about that. It's about court ordered access to records stored on an server in a specific geographic location - The USA. Now if the Brazilian government passed a law requiring WhatsApp to record all data on servers in Brazil that would at least be possible to comply with.


But by the US laws the US company has to share information information on those servers located in EU with US government if requested...


Which of course is bonkers. But that doesn't mean it's OK for a Brazilian judge to be similarly bonkers.




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