| Thanks for taking the time to respond, I really appreciate it. By the looks of it, the analytics cookies (eg SC_ANALYTICS_GLOBAL_COOKIE) are not set when not clicking "Accept and proceed". So my issue is only with the wording. In practice it is already opt in, so the text can and should be changed to opt in.
The wording opt out does say the default is to accept, and you have to explicitly protest to not accept.
(It looks like the wording was already changed?) Imho, you shouldn't look at it as cookies vs no-cookies. The GDPR is not really about cookies, but about protecting your personal data. You're allowed to set cookies! But if you're processing personal data (such as non-anonymous analytics), you do have to ask permission. What bothers me the most is the consent modal:
I have to click the small blue text "cookie details" (vs the large green "Accept and proceed"), and then click the gray "Decline cookies" to not have my personal data processed and shared. Why not give visitors 2 options equally? - "Please use (and share) my personal data to improve this (and other) sites", and - "No thanks, I'm just browsing" If you offer those 2 options (and don't try to hide the "no thanks" behind an extra click and a hidden link), I would seriously reconsider consenting.
As a sidenote: I would be even more likely to consent if it's not the first thing you force on me. Visiting a press release with a fresh session cookie? Or landing directly on a datasheet from a google search? Why even bother with non-anonymous analytics and ask me for consent?
But if I'm clicking through and visiting other pages? Sure, ask to track me. My personal default is to decline, but if you can show mutual benefits I'm way more likely to consent. As for the comments on the EU website I linked to: I agree. The wording is not clear as to what I'm accepting. As far as I understand: - "visitor preferences" and "operational cookies" are required - analytics cookies can be declined (even though they are already anonymous) - third party cookies are handled separately, when viewing third party content Following my own advice, I will contact the European Union DPO, and ask them to clarify the consent popup. This should really be an import addendum to my previous post!: the first step is to contact the site's DPO, and only escalate to your nation's data protection agency when this approach fails. Thank you again rgetz for taking the time to respond, and for raising this issue internally. It looks like wording of the privacy policy was already changed. I hope the consent popup can also be improved. Your response and the quick update of the privacy policy has greatly improved my opinion of Analog Devices. |