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Ask HN: Is Cookie Pop-Up Protection a Good Idea?

3 pointsby pipo2347 months ago
On my Android phone I&#x27;ve been using Duck Duck Go&#x27;s browser for a while. By default it visits sites &quot;incognito&quot; and aggressively purges cookies.<p>Of course this results in sites not remembering your (GDPR) privacy preferences which would in turn result in those pesky pop ups <i>every</i> time you visit a site. To mitigate this, DDG offers a feature to automatically handle the popups:<p><pre><code> When DDG detects cookie pop-ups on sites you visit it can automatically set your cookie preferences to minimize cookies and maximize privacy, then close the pop-ups. </code></pre> Technically, it&#x27;s far from the simplicity of something like DNT header, but it works reasonably well on a (small) majority of websites. I think this is because those websites use a standardized dialog, the remaining sites still require manual interaction with the pop-up.<p>What I&#x27;ve noticed recently in my own behaviour is that I tend to dismiss or ignore search results that DDG&#x27;s pop up feature <i>doesn&#x27;t recognize</i>. I.e.: I have a bias toward preferring sites that either don&#x27;t have cookies, don&#x27;t have cookie pop-ups or have cookie pop-ups that immediately disappear automagically.<p>So my question is: what if these kinds of tools gain wider adoption? Would that cause traffic to significantly decrease for sites with non-standard pop ups? And could that ultimately incentivize websites to tailor pop-ups to <i>not</i> annoy users? Any are downsides?

2 comments

al_borland7 months ago
I use the extension Hush to do something like this.<p>Regardless of the systems to try and make the modern web less annoying, if a website annoys me too much, I leave. I can notice it on my face. I will go to a site, and may have a slight smile as I start to look it over. Then a modal window pops up asking for my email... the slight smile disappears and turns to a look of annoyance. Then I move my mouse toward the top of the page and it pops up another modal to ask me not to leave. Then as I&#x27;m reading new ads load in and shift the content, so I lose my place. Then so many ads load that the site crashes and reloads, and the dance starts again.<p>I&#x27;m done with it. At step 2, if I don&#x27;t desperately need to see what&#x27;s on the page, I&#x27;m closing the tab. These sites seem so desperate to milk every penny out of each impression that they become unbearable to use. I have to question if they would do better with less, because they would (at least in theory) get more repeat traffic. But I guess it doesn&#x27;t matter these days, as few people go directly to sites and are instead driven to various sites by various social platforms.
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nicbou7 months ago
The uBlock Origin “annoyances” lists filter these cookie banners really well. I used it on Firefox for Android. I almost forgot about cookie banners because it worked so well.
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