this post was submitted on 22 Sep 2025
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Privacy
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Problem is not the law, but that the companies implemented it in as annoying of a way as possible to get people pissed off about the law and force it to be dropped, or for what actually happened which is that it's too much work to not opt-in to the cookies which essentially makes it opt-out not in.
And the idea to remove the requirements for "simple statistics" or whatever terminology they use will just get abused by using other illicit tracking tech to link the cookies to uniquely identify a person anyway. So it will effectively make the popups unnecessary in any circumstances and still allow tracking for marketing and surveillance.
Some websites do it right. They have a "reject all" button, and that's that. But then there are others where you have to deselect a whole shit load of checkboxes just to reject the fucking cookies. Sometimes they even have a "Pay to reject" shit. WTF. Ugh.
That's illegal. Report it to the government. Google got fined millions of euros just for making it two clicks on YouTube.
The law requires them to make a one button option to deny all.
Google got fined millions of dollars for making it two clicks. And then they changed it to one click "reject all" after that.
Right, but not all have fixed that. I still see lots of cases where I have to turn off several options individually. Though these could be sites outside of the EU jurisdiction, so they just don't care, or sites that make enough money off of the tracking data, that the fines would be insignificant even if the EU were to get around to fining them.
And again the comment stands that it's not the law, but the implementations that are bad. The law requires it to be simple, but that's not what was implemented.
The fines are not insignificant. Report it to the government.
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