It's not a matter of technical limitations, it's EU regulation and laws that make it so expensive to run that the margins are not enough.
Large actors can do it because they have other revenue sources, and they have resources to deal with the legal matters.
I am not saying regulations are bad, they are not, but every paragraph takes a small piece of the cake. And the cake is not infinite, so at a certain point people will go away because "I earn more on doing something else".
>t's EU regulation and laws that make it so expensive to run that the margins are not enough.
Not exactly. The EU regional market fragmentation and domestic protectionism of each country is a way bigger nerf to scaling tech companies domestically.
That's why all EU tech unirons aim straight for the US to sell their products/services there first, and only once they reach escape velocity there, then open themselves to EU customers.
the moment Google launched Gmail with free 1GB inbox many years ago the groupware suite market effectively died, the only other real player is Microsoft.
and likely Google/MSFT will deploy a copy here ran without direct interference from the US, and it'll probably chug along until the first really big lawful intercept disagreement (but there are a bunch of "mutual legal assistance treaties" so it'll take a while, and by then AI will eat us for paperclip NFTs anyway)
Large actors can do it because they have other revenue sources, and they have resources to deal with the legal matters.
I am not saying regulations are bad, they are not, but every paragraph takes a small piece of the cake. And the cake is not infinite, so at a certain point people will go away because "I earn more on doing something else".