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This is the error message you get in most European countries if you try to connect with the Los Angeles Times. The same happens with the Chicago Tribune, the New York Daily News, and The Baltimore Sun, operated by Tronc Inc., formerly Tribune Publishing.
In addition, 15 web properties owned by Fox News network in local markets are also unavailable, as are the websites of local stations in the ABC and CBS networks.
If you try to access USA TODAY, you get this message instead:
Welcome to USA TODAY Networkâs European Union Experience. It appears that youâre visiting us from a location in the European Union. We are directing you to our EU Experience. This site does not collect personally identifiable information or persistent identifiers from, deliver a personalized experience to, or otherwise track or monitor persons reasonably identified as visiting our Site from the European Union.
In fact, Gannett, which owns USA TODAY, has rolled out a European version of its daily news website, what they call their âEuropean Union Experience.â This apparently translates into a simplified version of the website, without ads or easy methods of searching for stories and articles.
Many other websites, news-related or not, are either blocked or not available. Those include for instance the Daily Collegian, published by students at Penn State, and the South End, a student publication by students at Wayne State University.
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GDPR451 scan results for 09/08/2018: Good News! Good News! Three of Evening Post Industries' websites are available in the EU again. 1,060 websites are still blocking the European Union. Full results: https://t.co/Wb2aOiw3ro #GDPR
âââ@VerifiedJoseph
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Joseph OâConnorâââaka @ VerifiedJoseph on Twitterâââpublished a list of unavailable or blocked websites on his GitHub page as of August 10, 2018. The list includes 1,060 websites to which anybody in Europe has yet no access.
This is âfrustrating many American tourists, business travelers, and ex-pats as well as Europeans interested in news from the States,â as reports Nieman Lab.
Jeff South, a journalism professor at Virginia Commonwealth University in Richmond and author of the NiemanLab report, asked Portugal-based journalist FlĂĄvio Nunes to comment about the block or unavailability of many websites.
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Professor @jcsouth asked me for a quick contribution to this article. Too many US news sites are still blocking the Europeans, two months after #GDPR took effect. And that's really sad. @NiemanLab https://t.co/7dih1DfWHN
âââ@FlavioNunesPT
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âUsually, your media is seen as an example for ours. I think is safe to say that, in Portugal, thereâs a big community of people that not only reads the Portuguese media but reads the U.S. press as well on a daily basis,â said Nunes.
âI was surprised when I saw that, a couple of months after, theyâre still blocking our access,â Nunes commented about Troncâs publications not being available after GDPR entered into force il late May. âItâs crazy because Europe is a massive market. We have over 500 million people living in the EU.â
GDPR stands for General Data Protection Regulation, a set of data protection rules implemented by the European Commissionâââapproved by the European Parliament in April 2016 and enforced 2 years later this past Mayâââfor all companies operating in the EU, wherever they are based.
GDPR has been both criticized and praised.
WIRED wrote: âOnce mocked, Europeâs new data protection has become a source of transatlantic envy.â âWhen GDPR was first passed, US commentators dismissed it as a piece of jealous protectionism,â Rowland Manthorpe explains, citing a recent editorial in The New York Times now calling for similar rules.
In April, when Facebookâs founder and CEO Mark Zuckerberg testified on Capitol Hill, Rep. Scott Peters asked him: âWhat the Europeans got right with the GDPR?â
Zuckerberg responded: âGDPR in general is going to be a very positive step for the Internet. It codifies a lot of things we have already done for a long time; but it also has new things which are good steps for us to take, like putting privacy controls in front of people constantlyâââwhich we have done randomly in the past.â
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I'm in Europe trying to read news back home and I'm getting blocked from U.S. news sites because of #GDPR. Thanks, Europe. #balkanization
âââ@jeffjarvis
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In a recent tweet while traveling to Europe, CUNY J-School professor Jeff Jarvis talked about GDPR as the Balkanization of the Internet.
âThanks, Europe,â he ironically tweeted.
âNothing to do with Europe and everything to do with the US publishers,â somebody responded on Twitter. âA bit of time and consideration would resolve it.â
Another said: âNot GDPR. Itâs US publishers blocking IP addresses. Same happens with European media when you try and access from US.â
To which Jarvis answered: âIt has everything to do with Europe. They are doing it *because* of GDPR.â
The European Internet vs the Internet was originally published in Hacker Noon on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story.
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