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> Skipping the EU makes sense if the company doesn't want to comply with regulations aimed directly at it

It makes sense if you’re prioritizing time to market and agility. Once you’ve nailed down your product, you can make it compliant for more-onerous jurisdictions. You see this in finance all the time, where the U.S. tends to have the tightest rules around e.g. betting and crypto.

> Once upon a time, companies delayed launches specifically so they'd launch a better product

Because software shipped in a box. Also, compliance is orthogonal to how good a product is. Siri AI might be crap. It might be great. It might be almost perfect and then made great on second release. Everything slows down if the entire development process has to deal with open APIs and lawyers at every turn.

It’s perfectly legitimate to say we’ll develop this in other markets and ship it to the EU when it’s fully baked.

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