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> they just ended up with a dependency on some tracking framework by accident, and they're too small to get in trouble for it. I'd say it's simply not in the spirit of the law. I.e. that cookie could be used to track you, but isn't. Sure, they could be secretly selling your info, but they could also be secretly storing your IP and anything else to fingerprint you. That would also be illegal, and no way you could know from the outside. So why are there not constant raids all over Europe, all the time? As I said, I do think it's because that law isn't enforced to just waste time on BS. If I walk across a red light in the middle of the night [0], where there's a car every 5 minutes, and do it carefully after looking left, right, left again, and you run up to cops parked nearby who saw that, and insist they do something, they'll laugh at you. If you insist and freak out, you have a bigger chance to get in trouble than I do. But that's not some sinister law that everyone breaks and that is enforced selectively, it really is for what it says on the tin, what a reasonable person would abide by it for. [0] Or put a session cookie I never use except for logged in users, and without any PII, because the site was written in 2000 and it's fine. |
What country is that illegal in?