Browser spec to eventually replace GDPR and cookie banners
16 points by BostonFern 5 months ago | 7 comments- daveoc64 5 months agoAs this proposal does not cover consent for everything a "cookie banner" would, the title is simply wrong.
- nickburns 5 months agoWorking draft: https://www.w3.org/TR/gpc/
- halb 5 months agoFinally, a better alternative to the do-not-stab header https://www.5snb.club/posts/2023/do-not-stab/
- Frieren 5 months ago> "Browser spec to eventually replace GDPR and cookie banners"
The HN title is nonsensical. A technical specification cannot replace a law.
From the linked document from w3c:
> GPC could potentially be used to indicate rights in other jurisdictions as well. For example, the GDPR potentially affords data subjects the right to limit the sharing of personal information under Articles 7 and 21.
So, this standard may help to better comply with GDPR. Nowhere in the document there is any indication of "replacing" GDPR being a goal or an effect of the proposed standard.
Thank you for sharing the link. I hope for a better title, thou.
- BostonFern 5 months agoThe title refers to the banners, not any laws.
- ChocolateGod 5 months agoNot a lawyer but if I remember correctly the laws don't even require cookie banners, instead they were invented as a hostile implementation of said laws and replicated because people thought they were required.
- ChocolateGod 5 months ago
- BostonFern 5 months ago
- egberts1 5 months agoUmmm, this one spec is trying to accomodate the world's requirement for ... tracking. Enough said.
Join Electronic Frontier Foundation because you should be in control of your data.