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582 points SweetSoftPillow | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0.001s | source
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michaelmauderer ◴[] No.45668112[source]
The problem here is not the law, but malicious compliance by websites that don't want to give up tracking.

"Spend Five Minutes in a Menu of Legalese" is not the intended alternative to "Accept All". "Decline All" is! And this is starting to be enforced through the courts, so you're increasingly seeing the "Decline All" option right away. As it should be. https://www.techspot.com/news/108043-german-court-takes-stan...

Of course, also respecting a Do-Not-Track header and avoiding the cookie banner entirely while not tracking the user, would be even better.

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1. emacdona ◴[] No.45668253[source]
One thousand percent yes. And I'll repeat because people need to see it called out as often as possible: this is due to malicious compliance by websites. Period.

I'm so cynical now that I can't read articles like this without my first reaction being to look at how it benefits companies that profit from ads.

My two theories here?

1. An attempt to shift liability from companies having to comply with GDPR to browsers having to comply.

2. An attempt to consolidate all cookie consent into the three (?) browser engines we have... so efforts to thwart it can be focused on just those places.