| Your choice to opt-out of cookies has the side-effect of sites breaking because they assume cookies are accepted. So you're pretty used to broken / non-working sites. In that case, I don't see in your case why having a constant pop-up message on every page of a working site is worse than a mostly broken website. Do broken websites still work well enough for you? This won't massively cripply EU online industries. Cookies used by the core service are unaffected, so EU companies can offer the same service as normal. The restrictions really affect cookie based traffic reports (so use weblogs or image beacons instead), A/B testing preferences, accepting money from advertisers to track visitors through your site. This hardly cripples EU online industries, it might have a positive side-effect of site visitors being more amenable to paying for online services which are currently ad-supported, so as to opt-out of cross-site analytics and advertiser profiling cookies. The consumer having the choice about their privacy is an issue that's only going to get more important over the next couple of years. If your business depends on building profiles of users without their consent, yes, those businesses need to adopt non-cookie methods of doing this, and/or consider being more upfront to the visitors, and explain clearly why these features are of benefit to the visitor. |
The article says that anything which you could use instead to get basically the same end result a cookie, but which technically isn't one, is still covered by this legislation. If so, you would need to get consent for non-essential image-beacons as well, or weblogs(?) or whatever else you chose.