Ive seen MS is having to do a lot of work in regards to pro privacy due to EU regulation, I switched on my oculus quest which I keep offline and questioned if enforced account, locked in applications that serve beyond base functions and the locked down setting, surely all this goes against privacy laws in some way.
Is this something regulators and Facebook will address or will fb slide through the cracks?
If they transparently inform buyers about the account requirement and what that means, then they have done their duty and are compliant, I'd say.
Not that I like that.
But as long as the consumer knows everything they need to know to make an informed decision about the product they're going to use, it's all good.
Now, this decision also needs to be voluntary, so if there are some dark patterns or other carefully constructed circumstances bullying the consumer into accepting all the bs, then that would violate the GDPR.
But what is voluntary or not is hard to say, for many products and services. Can be argued either way, and you better believe it will be argued either way.