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EU Facebook Advertising

Meta Threatens To Pull Facebook and Instagram From Europe If It Can't Target Ads (itwire.com) 252

"Facebook is threatening it will simply pull out of Europe altogether if it is no longer able to share data about European users with its U.S. operations, applications, and data centres," reports ITWire.

It's customary for regulatory filings to preemptively declare a wide variety of possible future hazards, and in that spirit a recently-filed Meta financial statement cites a ruling by the EU's Court of Justice (in July of 2020) voiding a U.S. law called the Privacy Shield (which Meta calls one legal basis for its current dara-transferring practices). Though courts are now determining the ruling's ramifications, ITWire notes that "with the European General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) well in force, the U.S. Privacy Shield principles were found non-compliant and consequently invalid." So while that ruling affects every American company, including cloud companies like Google, Microsoft, and Amazon, it's Facebook/Meta that "says stopping transatlantic data transfers will have a devastating impact on its targeted online advertisements capabilities."

Read it yourself, in Meta's own words:

"If a new transatlantic data transfer framework is not adopted and we are unable to continue to rely on Standard Contractual Clauses [now also subject to new judical scrutiny] or rely upon other alternative means of data transfers from Europe to the United States, we will likely be unable to offer a number of our most significant products and services, including Facebook and Instagram, in Europe, which would materially and adversely affect our business, financial condition, and results of operations."

Of course, the filing also cites other hazards like the possibility of new legislation restricting Facebook's ability to collect data about minors, complaining that such legislation "may also result in limitations on our advertising services or our ability to offer products and services to minors in certain jurisdictions."

And in addition, "We are, and expect to continue to be, the subject of investigations, inquiries, data requests, requests for information, actions, and audits by government authorities and regulators in the United States, Europe, and around the world, particularly in the areas of privacy, data protection, law enforcement, consumer protection, civil rights, content moderation, and competition..."

"Orders issued by, or inquiries or enforcement actions initiated by, government or regulatory authorities could cause us to incur substantial costs, expose us to unanticipated civil and criminal liability or penalties (including substantial monetary remedies), interrupt or require us to change our business practices in a manner materially adverse to our business, result in negative publicity and reputational harm, divert resources and the time and attention of management from our business, or subject us to other structural or behavioral remedies that adversely affect our business."

(Thanks to Slashdot reader juul_advocate for sharing the story!)
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Meta Threatens To Pull Facebook and Instagram From Europe If It Can't Target Ads

Comments Filter:
  • DO IT. (Score:5, Insightful)

    by starblazer ( 49187 ) on Sunday February 06, 2022 @07:22PM (#62244267) Homepage
    Frigging do it! I'd love to watch the stock plummet after they lose a whole continent,
    • Re:DO IT. (Score:5, Insightful)

      by postbigbang ( 761081 ) on Sunday February 06, 2022 @07:46PM (#62244341)

      I suggest doing this across the world.

      I might even go back again.

      Maybe.

    • Re:DO IT. (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward on Sunday February 06, 2022 @07:49PM (#62244347)

      Not only that but it would leave the European market open to a competitor who could grow a big enough userbase that, if providing a better more ethical product could crush Facebook globally.

      This is a great thing. The EU should 100% call their bluff and encourage them to do it.

      • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

        by saloomy ( 2817221 )
        The Chinese companies would move in. The Europeans do not have a viable tech services industry to speak of. Only the US and China do.
        • by ghoul ( 157158 )
          Russia ia a European country and Vkontakt is big
      • I don't know what a more ethical advertising and user-tracking system would look like...

        This reminds me of the recent Neil Young/Spotify dust-up - I don't think the EU cares if Facebook/instagram 'leaves Europe' - seriously, do they think they are an important part of modern society?

        Who cares, do it, you'll only hurt your (former) European employees.
        M

    • I love the smell of desperation in the morning.
    • Re:DO IT. (Score:5, Interesting)

      by Methuselah2 ( 1173677 ) on Sunday February 06, 2022 @08:52PM (#62244491)
      Will Zuck start to wonder why so many people are cheering his "Decline and fall" from Rome?
    • by Inglix the Mad ( 576601 ) on Sunday February 06, 2022 @09:29PM (#62244559)
      and nothing of value was lost.
    • by Arethan ( 223197 )

      Come on Meta, DO IT!
      I fucking dare you

      https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]

  • Awesome!! (Score:5, Insightful)

    by SuilAmhain ( 2819677 ) on Sunday February 06, 2022 @07:23PM (#62244273)

    This is great news. Will cost a few jobs, sure, but how many lives will be saved? F*ck Meta.

  • Yes (Score:5, Insightful)

    by enriquevagu ( 1026480 ) on Sunday February 06, 2022 @07:24PM (#62244275)

    Please!

  • by chill ( 34294 ) on Sunday February 06, 2022 @07:24PM (#62244279) Journal

    Sounds like an opportunity for a non-targeting competitor to eat their lunch in Europe.

    Fuck Meta and their ad targeting.

    • by Sique ( 173459 ) on Sunday February 06, 2022 @07:54PM (#62244359) Homepage
      Targeted advertising is not banned. The only thing that is banned is transferring and processing the data in the U.S.. Meta is free to set up an European targeted advertising operation, which they apparently don't want to do.
      • by bloodhawk ( 813939 ) on Sunday February 06, 2022 @08:10PM (#62244393)
        It is not banned currently, however complete banning of targeted advertising has been recommended and is actively under discussion with at worst an "opt-in" approach. Either way Targeted advertising death is on the horizon, that is why FB are so antagonistic, they see the future and it is not in their favour.
        • by jhecht ( 143058 )
          Facebook management has been in over their collective heads for a long time, and their reaction to Europe is just the latest example.
          • Facebook management has been in over their collective heads for a long time,

            Maybe they should stop standing on their heads?

      • by twisteddk ( 201366 ) on Sunday February 06, 2022 @08:31PM (#62244451)

        Precisely, The current investigation into the Schrems ruling from EU court on the non-acceptance of the US "privacy shield", is that companies in the US are potentially NOT protecting the data as is mandated by EU law (mainly because US laws do not provide for data privacy to the extent that the EU demands), and therefore the data is not allowed to leave the EU, in point of fact ACCESS to the data is not even allowed outside EU. This charter of the GDPR regulations is there to ensure that noone is subject to undue prosecution, as per the UN human rights charter (also signed by the US btw), and it has been implemented to avoid problems with authoritarian regimes. So it should be no issue for any freedom loving country to want to abide by these rules.

        Keep in mind the ruling is so far only leading to an investigation, because of the current findings. Meta (and any other company that holds personal data on EU citizens) might still implement measures to keep up to the EU standards. Google has already provided the "what does google know about me"-feature, precisely to conform to GDPR rules.

        Meta are similarly free to KEEP the data in EU, or transmit "targeting wants"-data from the US to the EU servers, rather than moving the personal data to the US and processing it there... But this will cost them money, because then they need to expand the EU datacentres and their many algorithms. They might also need to employ more people in the EU, at a higher cost.... All this is expensive. It's easier (cheaper) to try to combat the legislation (MS, Google and a few others have tried the same when they blatantly ignored EU rules, but they usually loose since laws in Europe are not really open to interpretation in the way they are in the US.

        Why Meta would want to threaten with social suicide, I cannot understand. It must be a desperation move. Maybe they are trying to mobilize support for their position amongst its users. Multiple competitors have no issues complying with the rules, and if facebook and instagram are gone tomorrow, EU users will migrate to alternatives. A few might try to do the china trick and use VPN, but that would be a minority of users, since this is not easily done by the average tech illiterate user.

        • I thought it was Sheryl Sandberg's job to present Meta's objectives diplomatically, so the rich brat doesn't stick his foot in his mouth and cause big problems for the company.

          This fairly recent NY Times piece on her [nytimes.com] seems to indicate she's become a less vocal proponent for Facebook in the aftermath of the January 6 insurrection.

          Can you imagine working for Facebook and then meeting people in the real world and having to explain when asked that you work for Facebook? Ewww. Judging from that article and h
        • >>Why Meta would want to threaten with social suicide, I cannot understand.
          Hi,
          From my perspective it's simple:
          7000 current employees in EU
          promised 10000 more for EU to build more of "meta"

          If they can't move the IP-labor to process the data to stateside for revenue growth,
          then they can quietly say "hey EU, We can't employ the 10K we promised, we are dismissing 1/2 of the 7000 without paying the labor unemployment penalties taxes because you created the mess with your laws".

          10,000 new jobs might

          • >>Why Meta would want to threaten with social suicide, I cannot understand.
            Hi,
            From my perspective it's simple:
            7000 current employees in EU
            promised 10000 more for EU to build more of "meta"

            If they can't move the IP-labor to process the data to stateside for revenue growth,

            then they can quietly say "hey EU, We can't employ the 10K we promised, we are dismissing 1/2 of the 7000 without paying the labor unemployment penalties taxes because you created the mess with your laws".

            10,000 new jobs might not seem like a lot, but it's a huge labor number and the fear of well paying jobs being lost ( and the tax revenue from even 1 of those 7000 ) does put exceedingly higher than normal pressure.

            That's my take on the game. because if google can do it, then everyone else can also.

            Eu has ~200 million employed people and 450 million population... I don't think "employment" is in any way something FB can use to "pressure" the EU... You seem to think the EU is a small town somewhere that depends on the taxes paid by FB employees...

      • by kerashi ( 917149 ) on Sunday February 06, 2022 @08:32PM (#62244453)

        I'm sure they could easily deal with setting up a European targetted advertising operation. The real issue, I think, is that their websites operate in a truly global manner. That is, a person on Facebook in the US can connect with a person on Facebook in Europe, viewing their posts and such, and Facebook would for usability reasons want to mirror those posts so as not to have ungodly latency for cross-ocean viewing.

        I hate to say it, but I do (to an extent) agree with Facebook. Saying "nothing can be shared" will be death to the global internet as we know it, just like saying "everything can be shared" is death to personal privacy. Clarifying where the line is would help immensely, and leaving it to the courts to do so is a recipe for disaster for all involved. Politicians on both sides of the Atlantic need to figure this stuff out.

        What I'd really like to see is for equivalent privacy protections to be written into US law. That would solve a lot of the issues, and would benefit US citizens immensely. That would likely be the ideal outcome for everyone except Zuckerberg's bank account, and I'm fine with that.

        • by thegarbz ( 1787294 ) on Monday February 07, 2022 @05:09AM (#62245235)

          That is, a person on Facebook in the US can connect with a person on Facebook in Europe, viewing their posts and such, and Facebook would for usability reasons want to mirror those posts so as not to have ungodly latency for cross-ocean viewing.

          That's not what the law requires be based locally. The issue is the transfer of *private* data, i.e. the shit Facebook knows about you, not the stuff you publish openly.

  • thanks, we had a nice run, you won't be missed.
  • Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)

    by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Sunday February 06, 2022 @07:25PM (#62244287)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • Re:Yeah, no (Score:4, Interesting)

      by serviscope_minor ( 664417 ) on Sunday February 06, 2022 @07:39PM (#62244329) Journal

      It's an odd flex. Worst that can happen is they back down and nothing changes. Breast case they follow through.

      It's like a murderous hostage taker threatening to shoot themselves in the head.

      Go for it mate!

      • by chill ( 34294 )

        So, like that scene in Blazing Saddles when Sheriff Bart arrives in town?

        Mmmm, breast case.

        (And Slashdot doesn't like elipses. Think's they're "ASCII art".)

      • I need to see more of the Breast Case. Perhaps the DD sized one. Thanks.

      • To me, it sounds a bit more like they're whining that complying with the law will make their business untenable. In which case, my sentiment is the same as yours... if you can't run your business without breaking the law, then your business is fundamentally unlawful. Shut it down.
        • remember, just because something is legal doesnt make it right. and just because something is illegal, doesnt make it wrong (examples, slavery was legal and marijuana wasnt (still isnt in some places)
    • There's absolutely no way they'd actually abandon an enormous market like the Europe. No, they're just rattling their sabres in the hopes of scaring the regulators off.

      The problem is that this isn't a threat of active harm. This is literally "I'm taking my ball and going home", which worked in 2nd grade because you're the only one with a ball. Zuck's making this threat on a playground with a thousand other balls so the threat brings nothing but mocking as you can see here.

  • just sat back and said OK Done Deal!
  • by BrendaEM ( 871664 ) on Sunday February 06, 2022 @07:27PM (#62244291) Homepage
    We also have no protection from multi-national corporations controlling our politics.
    • Re: (Score:2, Troll)

      We also have no protection from multi-national corporations controlling our politics.

      Indeed. It was shameful how the corporations were able to just buy the presidency for Jeb Bush.

    • by ufgrat ( 6245202 )

      I believe you have just answered your own question.

      But you probably knew that.

  • Oh no! (Score:5, Interesting)

    by quonset ( 4839537 ) on Sunday February 06, 2022 @07:33PM (#62244307)

    Anyway.

    Can you imagine how much their stock will plummet if they remove themselves from Europe? That $230 billion plunge [yahoo.com] in market value that happened last week will seem like peanuts.

    • It would basically be economic suicide for FB. They rely on ubiquitous access to remain dominant, without that competitors would rapidly displace them in EU and subsequently the rest of the world.
    • by Tom ( 822 )

      Can you imagine how much their stock will plummet if they remove themselves from Europe?

      You and me would be busy shorting their stock instead of posting on /. if that headline were real and not overblown bad journalism. :-)

  • Yes please! (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Lonewolf666 ( 259450 ) on Sunday February 06, 2022 @07:33PM (#62244309)

    The sooner that cancer disappears from the internet, the better

  • Just do it, I'd love it.
  • Call their bluff (Score:5, Informative)

    by jacks smirking reven ( 909048 ) on Sunday February 06, 2022 @07:37PM (#62244323)

    They are not going to just "leave" 450,000,000+ people in developed countries. Even without targeting ad revenue probably in the billions for the EU market.

    They're just mad because they won't be able to make all of the money instead of most of the money.

  • We have talked a lot about privacy and discussed it to death.

    While the general public casually gives away their crown jewels for a 25 cents off coupon from the grocery store. The same grocery store where they pick their prescriptions up. Never a care about how much that data is worth or how it is shared with "partners who bring new and exciting services" to them.

    We can let everyone track anything they want, but they need to disclose to the customers how much their data is being sold for. If the customers

  • by Arzaboa ( 2804779 ) on Sunday February 06, 2022 @07:42PM (#62244333)

    This would probably be the best news possible for any country and possibly for the world. How can we replicate this to every place on earth?

    Facebook willingly pulling their products? One couldn't have wished for a better outcome.

    Oh lord, Hallelujah!

    --
    When we speak of faith - the faith that can move mountains - we are not speaking of faith in general but of faith in the Lord Jesus Christ. - Russell M. Nelson

  • And ... (Score:4, Funny)

    by PinkyGigglebrain ( 730753 ) on Sunday February 06, 2022 @07:43PM (#62244337)

    nothing of value was lost in Europe.

    if the EU doesn't back down somehow the political fallout of them preventing all the FB and Instagram addicts in Europe from being able to get their Dopamine fix every few minutes could be ugly.

    But if the EU does back down you can kiss even the concept of online privacy goodbye. Or any kind of online rights for that matter as the Media Big Boys will have proven they call the shots.

    I wonder who is going to blink first. {grabs popcorn and large beverage}

  • Wait wut? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by hdyoung ( 5182939 ) on Sunday February 06, 2022 @07:44PM (#62244339)
    So, their logic is: if we can’t sell 500 billion in ads, we’re gonna take our product and go home, and forgo the paltry 250 billion we’d be making. Europe should call their bluff. Also - it sounds like it’s data transfer between the EU and the US thats the problem. Cant they just install a server farm in Europe somewhere, clone a bunch of code, and call it a day? Sounds like a bad case of “I don’ wanna”.
    • Re:Wait wut? (Score:5, Informative)

      by Lonewolf666 ( 259450 ) on Sunday February 06, 2022 @08:19PM (#62244417)

      There is a little problem with the CLOUD Act. Which allows the US government to demand stored data from US companies, even if the servers are ouside the US.

      From the European POV this means that giving sensitive data to any US companies means potentially giving them to the US government. Even if the company itself is willing to treat them as confidential. Partly because of that, two agreements for allowing transfer of personal data have already failed (another reason were shortcomings by the companies that processed the data).

      First the "Safe Harbour Privacy Principles" which were declated invalid by the European Court of Justice in October 2015. The EU and US created a replacement agreement called the "EU - US Privacy Shield", which was also struck down in 2020.
      Essentially this means that the EU considers data protections offered by US companies insufficient, because the US government can always say "hand them over".

      • Thanks. That clarifies it. So its a disagreement at the governmental level, between the EU and the US. Meh. Fine. Meta can sit it out while mommy and daddy figure out the details.
        • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

          by Lonewolf666 ( 259450 )

          Actually the governments had an agreement, but people challenged the agreement in court. The highest EU court eventually found that the agreement was not compatible with EU data protection law and declared it invalid.
          Exactly that process was repeated with a second agreement.
          Now I guess resuming the data exchange requires amending the law at least on one side. Either the US can scrap the CLOUD Act, or the EU drops its standards for protecting the data of its citizens.

        • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

          by Anonymous Coward
          Other companies like MS etc found alternative ways around it. All you need to do is ensure your US employees do not have access and the data sits in the EU. That way the US court can't compel a US employee to provide anything as they don't have access and an EU person can't respond to any such demand for data as the EU laws prevent them from doing so. really isn't that complex to ensure the US stupidity is neutered.
      • by ceoyoyo ( 59147 )

        Individual people, including Americans, should also regard giving information to American companies as giving it to the American government. Because it is.

        If you keep it out of the US they at least have to use an Orion to get it.

      • The bottom line is that that the EU is more interested in protecting the privacy of people then the American government is, including people in the US itself.

        Constitution, what Constitution? No Constitution round here...

  • by ruddk ( 5153113 ) on Sunday February 06, 2022 @07:48PM (#62244343)

    Just do it. Please.

  • How dare you threaten us with a good time!

  • by gnasher719 ( 869701 ) on Sunday February 06, 2022 @07:53PM (#62244357)
    Someone read something and completely misunderstood it. There is no threat here, and no promises either unfortunately.

    A publicly traded company must inform its shareholders of risks to the business. What they said is quite simply "if the EU makes it illegal for us to do our business in Europe the way we are currently doing it, we may stop to do business in Europe.". Which is quite obvious really.

    It is mentioned because it is a possible risk to their business (however unlikely, it's possible), and they have to mention all possible risks.
    • That isn't entirely correct. There was absolutely no need for them to add in that they may stop doing business in the EU, that was a moronic part of the statement that was unnecessary.
      • Comment removed based on user account deletion
        • that is just BS, they do not need to withdraw at all, they can simply choose to follow the legislation as many other companies do. The threat of withdrawal is just a tantrum and is most definitely not required to be said to shareholders unless they are seriously considering said tantrum as the laws definitely do not require it.
      • Well, if they can't make money there anymore; how does it make sense for them to do business there? I mean... I get it... ads are annoying. I block them in general myself; whitelisting only sites I use with significant enough regularity that I would be seriously put out if they went away. But ads are also how most "free" sites and services are paid for. And do you really think Facebook's user base... even just its EU user base... would stay if they cut off "free", ad-supported, access and switched to m

        • Ads are not banned in the EU. You can have as many ads on your site as you want, no problem at all.

          The problem is targeted ads, or, more specifically targeted-to-the-person ads that require tracking. GDPR makes tracking difficult - there are limits on what data you can collect and what you can do with said data.

          So, you can still make money from ads, just not "all the money" using tracking ads.

          Twenty years of free web services have conditioned users to *expect* them to be free. And it will require quite a culture change... one which won't happen quickly... to break that conditioning.

          Twenty years ago there were no targeted-to-the-person ads or as much tracking as there is now.

          As for this:

          Why not just close the EU offices and datacenters (if they have them), create a lower-bandwidth version of the sites, and host it from outside EU jurisdiction?

          There prob

      • by PPH ( 736903 )

        that was a moronic part of the statement that was unnecessary

        No. It was quite necessary. For the reasons that the PP stated. This was taken from an SEC filing. Which must enumerate possible risks to income. Not likely risks. Just possible. Or they (Meta) get their ass sued off if for some unlikely reason they have to make this decision.

  • Do Meta execs actually believe that Facebook will survive leaving Europe? Because I sure don't. And I doubt Europe will believe it either.
  • Sorry for that image.
  • by gitano_dbs ( 1490853 ) on Sunday February 06, 2022 @08:17PM (#62244413) Homepage

    Please take Whatsapp out too, and good riddance :D

  • They will not "pull out". Worst case, they might spin off an EU company which will run a clone of FB and Instagram but pay 99% of their profit to Meta in licensing fees for running and maintaining their software. Perhaps even add a paid service for FB-USA and FB-EU if they want see/share content across continents, where each user will explicitly pay to transfer they data - EU is probably not likely to limit individual's right to store their own data in another country - $1/1EUR per year to backup your data

  • Makes for a nice improvement here and hopefully another stock price crash.

  • I doubt that Facebook's shareholders would sit back & allow Zuckerberg to abandon such a lucrative market. Privacy laws are coming & they'll have to adapt & minimise any losses they might incur as a result, the same as everyone else who wants to be a surveillance company in the EU.
    • I assume that Zuckerberg doesn't want to; but Facebook's share structure is set up such that if he did the rest of them would pretty much just have to suck it up.

      Class A shares are worth 1 vote per share. Class Bs are worth 10. Zuckberburg owns enough of the Class Bs to give him a majority on any votes he may take an interest in; like other shareholders opposing him.

      Some shares are also covered by "holder voting agreements [edgar-online.com];though I don't know how many and how those are distributed.

      In practice, ther
  • The amusing part of this is Google, Facebook et al had the opportunity to be good netizens and behave in such a way that their access and control of this data didn't need to be regulated. Google in Particular promised the Ad Industry could self regulate and hence laws and restrictions were not necessary and just an expensive burden to everyone.
  • Don't threaten me with one.
  • The hell they'll pull Facebook. They may degrade the experience somewhat hoping for sympathy.

    Why isn't there an opensource decentralized Facebook yet? oh right, Facebook is zero cash flow for the hoi polloi.

  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • Don't let the door hit your stinky ass on the way out. We just cleaned it.

  • People will be free from tracking, cyber stalking, and manipulation.

  • We need to start a "No Targeted Ads" campaign here in the states so FB drops us too!

  • Breath until you let him have his candy..

  • by msauve ( 701917 )
    >Meta Threatens To Pull Facebook and Instagram From Europe If It Can't Target Ads

    And nothing of value would be lost.
  • Can he pull from the US too?

  • Just as much as I want to say: DO IT.... there are some technical questions.

    I have friends all over Europe, and here I am in the US. How will I access their feeds? Or check their friends? How I will even discover common friends?

    There is really no easy way. Remote joins would require at least a "primary key" to be shared. And all operations will incur a 120ms+ additional ping (while pages normally load under 60ms to be accepted as "fast").

    Add in all other locales that want to host their own citizens (India,

    • You can use some other service, it's not like Meta is the only way to communicate.

      Also, GDPR does not prevent a global communication platform. It prevents collecting and processing data that is not technically needed to provide the service (without consent that cannot be condition to access the service).

  • Hell, I wish they would pull out of the US too. Fucking parasites.

  • That'll show 'em! While you're at it, shut down US operations to get back at Congress for harassing Zuck! Go, Meta!
  • You can bet your bum Facebook won't be withdrawing from Europe any time soon. Imagine the boost that would give to competitors currently existing only on the fringe, even though they're pretty good Facebook substitutes. Mostly, all they're lacking is numbers. They'd probably pick up quite a lot of subscribers directly if Facebook pulled out of Europe, and tons more as friends and relatives of "Island Europe" inhabitants joined the new social media to stay in touch.

    Some examples I'm thinking of are Diaspo

  • Facebook is convenient but, I can use something else

    Would anyone in Europe even care?
  • by Tom ( 822 )

    Yes, please do! Get this cancer out of our... oh, wait. That's just a bullshit headline and nothing like that actually happened. Damn. And here I was hoping for a better life in Europe AND the destruction of Facebook all in one move.

  • Yet another way to highlight the idiocy of region locking.

    Oh yeah. And fuck Facebook.

  • by OneHundredAndTen ( 1523865 ) on Monday February 07, 2022 @09:38AM (#62245689)
    Can you now pull out of the US? Please?

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