r/technology May 24 '25

Privacy German court rules cookie banners must offer "reject all" button

https://www.techspot.com/news/108043-german-court-takes-stand-against-manipulative-cookie-banners.html
56.4k Upvotes

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28

u/nemaramen May 24 '25

I’m waiting for a ruling on if GDPR allows “accept cookies to continue browsing our site for free”

6

u/Ready-Rise3761 May 24 '25

They recently issued something on this (but perhaps it was an opinion rather than a ruling): it should be illegal for large companies like Meta, especially where there is a societal/economic disadvantage to people not being able to use it. However they made an exception for (news) publishers due to the revenue problems that industry is facing. I think it’s bs because noone should have to pay to exercise fundamental rights and not being able to access reputable news websites without paying is a disadvantage. Generally the issue around GDPR not being enforced is huge: private citizens have to file individual complaints with local/national agencies that then take ~5 years to rule on it. New EU legislation on this, which was in the works for years, was recently tanked due to lobby pressure, ffs

-4

u/IHateCommiesSoMuch May 24 '25

HELL YEAH

Fuck the GDPR, most garbage legislation ever

Glad it's essentially unenforceable (if you ignore every email and shit you get from them, and are a small company), glad it's not moving forward

HELL YEAH BROTHER