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by lmkg
2727 days ago
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Which might be fine, depending on their privacy policy. Let's take a look... Their privacy policy indicates they are claiming Legitimate Interest as the legal basis for using Google Analytics. My network tab also sees hits form ShareThis and Facebook, which are not mentioned in the Privacy Policy. There's a section on Embedded Content, but I don't see any content embedded in the privacy policy itself. https://gdpr.eu/privacy-policy/ I will say this does a good job of being straightforward and readable, and covering what a privacy policy needs to cover. But it's still incomplete with regards to what data is being sent where. |
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A legitimate interest is one that prevents the service from operating. E.g. if you're a pizza delivery service, you need to use the customer's address, since it's implicit in what the service does and the customer expects you to use their address for the purpose of home delivery.
If you block Google Analytics however, in what way will the service be impacted from the perspective of the user experience? There is no impact, even if this costs the business optimization opportunities or money. You can argue that the inability to use Google Analytics can have a long term impact on user experience, but that's not how legitimate interests work.
In general, "making more money" or "becoming more popular" are invalid reasons for stating a legitimate interest.