Vague Erasure Consequences Burden Businesses
Subsection (9) states data subjects "shall bear the consequences" of erasure if it causes service disruption or legal breaches, but fails to define what this means—creating uncertainty about whether businesses can refuse requests, charge fees, or terminate services. This directly contradicts subsection (2)'s unconditional right to be forgotten "without providing justification," leaving businesses unable to determine when erasure obligations apply. Additionally, subsection (3) requires "complete removal to the greatest extent possible" from public websites and replications—a standard exceeding GDPR that imposes extraordinary monitoring and removal costs on platforms and aggregation services.