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Ask HN: GDPR pop-ups are getting so annying, what should we do about it?

17 点作者 smoqadam超过 3 年前
Lately, I close every website that shows me a big, junky, stupid GPDR cookie consent (e.g. https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.runnersworld.com&#x2F;), but honestly I don&#x27;t find many websites that has a reasonably small and well-designed cookie consent (e.g. https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.rei.com&#x2F;).<p>It seems that these pop-ups are designed to annoy users to force them to click on the Accept button right away, and most of them hide the rejection button somewhere, or make it difficult to find.<p>The reader mode on the browser works well sometimes, but it&#x27;s not a permanent way to get rid of those pop-ups.<p>These pop-ups are making it hard to enjoy the Internet, what do you suggest to do to get rid of these pop-ups?<p>Thank you.

17 条评论

onion2k超过 3 年前
<i>These pop-ups are making it hard to enjoy the Internet, what do you suggest to do to get rid of these pop-ups?</i><p>Embrace them. Learn to love them. They&#x27;re a <i>good feature</i>. Making websites explicitly require permission to do (subjectively) negative things like tracking users is a massively positive step in the right direction towards us all having ownership and agency over of our lives as we spend time online. Sure, it means we have to do a little work to say yes or no when a site wants to do something, but that&#x27;s the cost of privacy. It&#x27;s not very high.<p>There could be technical solutions (eg browsers could sent a header to automatically consent with the initial request) or you could use a plugin (eg consent-o-matic), but really, this stuff is important enough that &quot;Eurgh! I had to click a button <i>again</i>! I&#x27;d sacrifice my privacy not to have to do that any more!&quot; is a <i>really</i> bad take in my opinion.
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Xelbair超过 3 年前
Comply with the law, don&#x27;t gather unnecessary PII and poof - no need for popups.
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bwb超过 3 年前
I use a chrome extension to auto accept everything. They are incredibly annoying. I wish i could do that on my phone.<p>I do not know any non techy who gives them more than 1 second of thought. They annoy everyone without doing anything good. My hope is the EU passes real privacy regulation at the company level. This cookie popup accomplishes nothing beyond annoying everyone.
drakonka超过 3 年前
I think what we can do about it is exactly what you&#x27;ve been doing: close the sites that purposefully make them obnoxious. The GDPR does not require these consent prompts to be this horrible. Websites make them that way to annoy users into getting mad at the privacy legislation _and_ also just click &quot;Allow&quot; by default to get to the content. Any website that uses such tactics is not a website I&#x27;m interested in using.
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mgbmtl超过 3 年前
I use the uBlock Origin filters for &quot;annoyances&quot; on Firefox, both desktop and mobile, and I don&#x27;t ever see them. The filter is not enabled by default.
d13超过 3 年前
They’re not necessary unless you’re doing non-annoymised tracking, like, for example, using the Devil’s Spawn that is Facebook Pixel. If websites are doing this, and asking you to consent they need to be punished - hit the back button and boycott them forever. It’s completely unnecessary - the web would be a so much better place is we all did this.
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BugWatch超过 3 年前
We all know of SponsorBlock and its user-submitted segments for the YouTube videos, right?<p>Well, can&#x27;t we build the similar addon and the crowd-sourced database, but one that would submit specific rule (page elements, and click order) to block everything - incl. &quot;legitimate interest&quot; bullshitery- except the barest of essential cookies?
jbjbjbjb超过 3 年前
Why haven’t they been implemented as a browser feature? And how comes the larger websites don’t seem to need the banners?
ianpurton超过 3 年前
We need Google to stop showing sites like these in their results.<p>The user experience is shit so don&#x27;t send them any traffic.
captainbland超过 3 年前
To me it seems like they&#x27;re usually similar enough and have broadly similar controls that it should be something that users should be able to configure from their browsers on a blanket basis, which should be provided in some standard HTTP headers&#x2F;accessible through JS.
baash05超过 3 年前
I just put an ip-address to country list in my middleware and block all the GDPR countries. Now I have no issue with popups or cookies.<p>Honestly, I&#x27;d like to see more people follow that. I got the idea from others and it seems like a perfect solution.<p>People who can&#x27;t&#x2F;don&#x27;t want cookies cannot really use any site I&#x27;ve ever worked on. It makes no sense building things for people who won&#x27;t ever be customers.
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kappuchino超过 3 年前
In an - at least in theory - open system some if not all players over time will maximise their gain from it. So advertisers wants your data, because the more they have, the more they can earn from specialised trageting. (This is why I believe Facebook is an advertising platform, not a social network, but I digress). So at some point you can only access information when logged in and (lets say for the sake of making a point) give your name, dob and much more. (Sounds familiar, like a paywall?). The GDPR makes it inconvenient to have and track all that data if not outright illegal for some cases. And asking for confirmation to use cookies to track a user is the neccessary evil to highlight that you are tracked. I understand the annoyance it creates for you and other users. Its still necessary.<p>And, if I may add that, its some kind of a new understanding I got for other systems as well. Releated example: There will - over time - no better google &quot;competitor&quot;. Know why? Because if there is, at some point, then SEO will optimize the f** out of that competitor, too and make it maximally worse for everyone. Just like the optimization in the example above with the data. Except that the GDPR is a law for EU Citicens while google&#x2F;the competitor only has to make it tolarable for them and their ad renvenue.<p>I find that perspective incredibly frustrating: Systems will get worse to a point of equilibrium, but its not the kind of &quot;nice to work with&quot; you and I have in mind. (Edit: Spelling)
OhNoNotAgain_99超过 3 年前
advertisement as webcontent is the modern spam. I wouldn&#x27;t be surpriced if this is now the majority of all internet traffic. It used to be that spam was email related and the major internet traffic.
M2Ys4U超过 3 年前
Cookie banners have nothing to do with the GDPR.<p>They are a requirement of the ePrivacy Directive from 2002.
trixie_超过 3 年前
GDPR is a preview into what a more regulated web would look like and it’s awful. What should we do? Fight it. Demonstrate the pointlessness of the regulation now that everyone has a taste of it. Complacency will lead to more regulation. Leading to regulators able to shut down your site for not following arcane rule 345 subsection A. You think it’s a joke, but this is how it starts.
mytailorisrich超过 3 年前
The GDPR mandate explicit consent and websites really want your consent because they rely on those cookies. So we end up with those dark patterns pop-ups because of the usual law of incentives and self-interest.<p>As a consequence, IMHO the only way to get rid of those pop-ups is to change the GDPR to mandate a simpler format. But that&#x27;s not straightforward when there are potentially cookies for different functions and each requires specific consent... We&#x27;re touching a fundamental issue with wanting to regulate the way the GDPR do...
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ssss11超过 3 年前
I think they are ugly, clumsy and annoying because the companies that are forced to show them resent that and want it to fail. It feels like they’re saying to me “Look at this horrible thing I’m forced to present to you, I’m not letting you read what you’re here for until you go through the most annoying way of responding”<p>It should be a browser feature but chrome has dominant market share and why would they do anything in the interests of their users’ data security (which of course jeopardises their adtech empire).<p>We need a better browser…. Don’t say Firefox. Brave could be it I suppose.
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