To answer your question, I will give you an example. My son regularly buys products that are made and sold in the United States. There are no restrictions on those products here. The same goes for financial services. Internationalization, globalization, the opening up of borders and free trade are realities that we are constantly dealing with. In addition, the modern tools of electronic transfer make borders invisible, to a certain extent.
If we are subject to stricter limitations than our competitors, it will be our companies that suffer and our jobs that are lost. We even run the risk that our companies will consider it easier to operate in other countries, unless we sign international agreements to harmonize legislation. That is the danger we are facing.
You say that spam makes up 85% of emails, but that leaves 15% that are legitimate transactions and that we must not lose.