- cross-posted to:
- technology@lemmy.world
- europe@feddit.org
- cross-posted to:
- technology@lemmy.world
- europe@feddit.org
cross-posted from: https://lemmy.zip/post/52834195
“If adopted, these amendments would not simplify compliance but hollow out the GDPR’s and ePrivacy’s core guarantees: purpose limitation, accountability, and independent oversight,” Itxaso Dominguez de Olazabal, from the European Digital Rights group, told EUobserver.
The draft includes adjustments to what is considered “personal data,” a key component of the GDPR and protected by Article 8 of the Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union.
Who is continually proposing the gutting of EU’s privacy and data protections? They need to be ousted
It’s not gutting it, it’s changing the system with same result. Instead of annoying cookie consent pop-ups, a setting in the browser with admissible cookies (same as in the pop-up) this way the unwanted cookies are blocked from the browser itself (apart of those which anyway get blocked by the adblocker and privacy settings). With this there isn’t needed anymore this pop-up. It’s a good idea, I think.
That’s just one of the changes though. Most people are fine with that I think. The problem is the changes to what is considered personal data and more permissibility on that side.
Yeah, there won’t be a need anymore because they can just say “yes to all” for you.
This is a horrible idea
Want it actually better? Simply prohibit the entire sale of personal data, period,end of story
No, with this to what you say yes or no, you can set it in the browser instead in this Pop-up. All what you don’t want get blocked. This way you set it one time in your browser for all pages you visit. instead ov everytime in each page. The result is the same, but without annoying consent nags. With the GDPR all pages are forced by law to ask for your consents, before with this pop-up, and now following the consent settings in the browser. This is the only difference, less nags for the user. With the page permission settings and the adblocker, this crap anyway get blocked. So this consent window in any case is useless.
Enforcing the restriction through a browser web standard, instead of a popup susceptible to anti-patterns, is a good idea. Sure, you could configure your browser to say “yes to all”, but you control the browser. You could also configure it to say “no to all” if that’s what you want. It’d be the equivalent of a popup, just automated by you. It’s the way I always thought the cookie permissions should have been done. The same way as when a website asks about permissions for notifications, or camera/mic access.
But I don’t think this is what the article is talking about. They are not talking about using a web standard or anything like that, they are talking about how the very definition of “personal data” is being changed, and that does not look good.
Is that really what this is about? I feel the GDPR is a different thing, independent of the cookies popup being a browser standard or not. The article talks about altering the definition of “personal data”. I don’t see why you can’t keep the same definition while requesting websites to follow a browser standard… so I feel these are different things.
Or are you implying that the EU doesn’t get proposals to gut privacy/data protections? (regardless of whether they’re accepted)






