|
|
|
|
|
by dmitriid
1317 days ago
|
|
> We can all see the results of it. It made the web experience worse for everyone This bullshit again. It wasn't the GDPT that made the web worse. This is is entirely on the companies who took a look at GDPR and said: no, we're going to ignore it, continue siphoning user data, and trick users into "consent" through dark patterns (actually illegal under GDPR). > Thought experiment: why didn’t any major ad tech company announce any harmful affects of the 99 section GDPR. But they did announce billions in revenues shortfall (ie Meta) when Apple made tracking opt in by one three line dialog box? Funny how you don't conduct a thought experiment on why cookie pop-ups exist and what GDPR has to say about this. |
|
The fact is that the cookie pop ups would never be necessary if the GDPR hadn’t been passed.