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by JadeNB 1519 days ago
I can believe that there are some people who don't care if they're tracked, but do you believe that there's anyone who wants to be tracked?

Maybe someone out there somewhere does, but surely such people, who actively want to be tracked, are in the distinctly small minority. In that case, why should the onus be on everyone else to communicate their intent, rather than on the few users affected to communicate their intent?

1 comments

>why should the onus be on everyone else to communicate their intent, rather than on the few users affected to communicate their intent?

Because this effectively bans any kind of tracking cookies which, while most are kind of awful, there are legitimate reasons for their existence. Shifting the conversation from a user choice to an effective ban is a completely different conversation with pros and cons that must be considered separately.

> Because this effectively bans any kind of tracking cookies which, while most are kind of awful, there are legitimate reasons for their existence. Shifting the conversation from a user choice to an effective ban is a completely different conversation with pros and cons that must be considered separately.

It doesn't at all ban them—it just makes them only effective for users who explicitly opt in. And if that's too much of a burden to impose on those very few users, then why is it reasonable to impose the burden on the vast majority of users who don't want to be tracked?