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583 points SweetSoftPillow | 2 comments | | HN request time: 0.538s | source
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forgotmypw17 ◴[] No.45670627[source]
I've come up with an easy solution, which works almost all the time. When a cookie consent dialog interferes with me using the website, I close the tab and move on.

I've found a high correlation between cookie consent notices and low-signal content, so this strategy has actually saved me a lot of time I would've spent reading/watching something that doesn't help me.

replies(1): >>45670878 #
tonymet ◴[] No.45670878[source]
How do you book airline tickets? Ir other critical business ? My doctors office has a cookie banner . Should I just stop going ?
replies(2): >>45671127 #>>45671373 #
forgotmypw17 ◴[] No.45671373[source]
That's why I said "almost all of the time".

But to the flights example, I was just looking for flights starting at Google Flights, which doesn't have cookie banners, and the two sites I went to for booking also did not have cookie banners.

replies(3): >>45671573 #>>45673164 #>>45675381 #
1. SpicyLemonZest ◴[] No.45671573[source]
Which booking website are you going to that doesn't have cookie banners? I spot checked multiple EU and US airlines just now (Ryanair, Air France, United, Alaska) and all of them had a cookie banner.
replies(1): >>45672664 #
2. forgotmypw17 ◴[] No.45672664[source]
I started with Google Flights and went to two other sites that it directed me to.

Just to reiterate, I'm not religious about this practice. If I need to click a cookie banner to book a plane ticket, so be it.

I just treat cookie banners as a strong negative signal.