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by nickpp
703 days ago
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I take my legal advice from lawyers, not the internet. They are the ones defending us in court if need come. Their position was simple: my team uses 3rd party analytics tools (no ads or anything) so IPs will be passed and cookies will be stored. We don’t control them, we don’t know what kind, if they can be considered personal info or not (GDPR is intentionally vague - classic bad law). So we need to be extra careful since our regulator is not a sane one like the UK’s. Thus: follow the common practice - cookie banner. End of story. |
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If I were you, I'd consider changing my lawyers. This is explicitly forbidden by GDPR (art 28), you have to know what your contracted data processors are doing, and you have to have processes in place to assure data subjects rights (eg remove their data from your contracted third parties on request). Cookie banners have nothing to do with this, and you're in breach of GDPR cookie banner or not. If your lawyers didn't stop you from breaching art 28 but recommended slapping a cookie banner "to be extra careful", that's a major red flag.