Well, by applying the Bavarian court’s ruling to Storj we can infer that any EU-based end user who did not explicitly agree to, cannot be told by satellites to contact nodes hosted under US jurisdiction. This means that, let say, if a business operating within EU jurisdiction makes a product that runs on-premises, let say some backup software, this product will likely not be allowed to use libuplink, and instead will have to use an S3 gateway run inside EU.
The same problem happens if JS library for the browser - #7 by jtolio will ever be operational, because Javascript code in a web browser is essentially an on-premises part of software.
That’s just two scenarios, and I’m worried there will be more. Like, maybe this means that there needs to be a satellite hosted outside Google Cloud?
Anyway, I trust Storj engineers will figure the problem out.