I agree with the other comments here that you're better off just hosting it yourself. Though, if you go down the path of considering commercial services check out y.gy (note: I'm affiliated). It would allow you to see where people are clicking from (Twitter, Reddit, etc.) and where they are clicking (city-level). It _could_ be useful depending on your traction.
Here to say thanks for using getwaitlist.com and let us know if you have feedback for us anytime :) (Context: Am the founder) Also, Hiringtools looks slick!
dang: Your about bio says "Conflict is essential to human life, whether between different aspects of oneself, between oneself and the environment, between different individuals or between different groups" and that is exactly what is happening here. It's a fruitful discussion with a lot of nuance and yes, disagreement. Nothing here seems against guidelines
well the article clearly says that the problem is that EU passes legislation that are from the point of view of the customer not the producer, which is a way to increase the quality of life, you as a consumer are (more?) protected against the exploitation by those entities with large pockets and zero incentives to behave ethically.
What is an example of this? I don't work in real estate, but just based on the # of OCR companies for B2B PDF data extraction, I would imagine it's still a huge problem.
There has been a lot of politics. It's yet another case study for "why we can't have nice things."
When XMP first came out, Adobe tools would look at all the metadata in, say, an image file (such as EXIF) and re-express it in XMP format. I liked that a lot because I could read that XMP packet with my RDF tools and have complete access to all the metadata with very simple software.
At some point other people in the industry accused Adobe of undermining other metadata standards and Adobe was pressured to only use XMP for data that could not be expressed with EXIF and other formats. This takes away complete and easy-to-work-with metadata unless I write my own tools that can convert the EXIF metadata to XMP and merge it with the XMP which might be in the document.
The semantic web community also has some blame here as it never embraced XMP, if Adobe had had more industry support it might not have nerfed XMP. I very much like how XMP adopted solutions to problems like keeping track of the order of authors that communities like the one behind Dublin Core haven't had the moral fortitude to address... Keeping Dublin Core in the category of "metadata for an elementary school library" as opposed to the world beating solution that XMP and DC could have been.