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France Fines Google $120M and Amazon $42M For Dropping Tracking Cookies Without Consent (techcrunch.com) 36

France's data protection agency, the CNIL, has slapped Google and Amazon with fines for dropping tracking cookies without consent. From a report: Google has been hit with a total of $120M for dropping cookies on Google.fr and Amazon ~$42M for doing so on the Amazon .fr domain under the penalty notices issued today. The regulator carried out investigations of the websites over the past year and found tracking cookies were automatically dropped when a user visited the domains in breach of the country's Data Protection Act. In Google's case the CNIL has found three consent violations related to dropping non-essential cookies.
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France Fines Google $120M and Amazon $42M For Dropping Tracking Cookies Without Consent

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  • It's important to use a Cookies Manager with your browser and often delete ALL the cookies.

    Companies getting permission from you to save Cookies only means they save a huge amount of information on your computer.
    • Install the browser extension "I don't care about cookies" so you don't get asked about cookies (it just accepts everything), then install the extension "cookie auto delete" so cookies are deleted when you leave a domain. Best solution to the cookie problems.
    • I simply delete all cookies whenever I close the browser or, when it's up for a bit, clear everything before I go on my surfing rampage. I even have Firefox set to only allow cookies from the main site. No third party cookies allowed.

      Does it really hurt companies that much to have to reset a cookie thinking I'm a new visitor? Don't know, but if it screws with their metrics, that's a good thing.

      • I simply delete all cookies whenever I close the browser or, when it's up for a bit, clear everything before I go on my surfing rampage.

        That way, you have to log on to each of your online accounts over and over again whenever you browse. But you're protected against the horror of seeing online advertising related to the things you usually buy.

        • How many accounts would you need to log into each day? Two? Three? Is that so horrible to do, especially when leaving your account wide open like that is a security risk. By forcing yourself to log in, it is more secure.

          As for ads for what I usually buy, I don't buy online so nothing to worry about. Don't see ads anyway.

  • by CastrTroy ( 595695 ) on Thursday December 10, 2020 @01:16PM (#60816118)

    Unpopular opinion, but I've really tired of seeing all the massive pop-overs asking for permissions for cookies. People should just get in the habit of deleting cookies more often so that they can't be tracked. I have a whitelist of cookies that don't get deleted so I stay logged into a few choice sites, and then everything else gets deleted every time I restart my browser, which is usually at least once a week. I have also permanently disabled 3rd party cookies which has never caused a functional problem for me.

    The client holds all the cards as far as cookies are concerned, so there's not much reason to try and force the businesses to follow a standard and ask the user every time they visit a site whether or not they can store cookies. Just build better cookie management features into browsers that allow people to actually take control of how they are being tracked.

    • ...and blocking script is a no-go in the great majority of websites, today
    • by Mattcelt ( 454751 ) on Thursday December 10, 2020 @01:22PM (#60816138)

      I've really tired of seeing all the massive pop-overs asking for permissions for cookies

      This (user fatigue) is the entire point, and a massive, industry-wide "fuck you" to Europe and the GDPR. It's malicious compliance, and designed to cause users to be irritated (with GDPR) and stop paying attention to what they're agreeing to.

      GDPR should have gone further and required opt-in by default without user interaction. But alas, we got this instead.

      • Why can't a single response from users be applied by software to similar situations? Not asking for site X, but for all sites that want to use this type of cookie? Couldn't Firefox or other browsers do that?

        • It's not about making this easy for you or indeed giving you a choice. They will wear you down until you submit. You're already telling them not to track you, aren't you? There's an extra header for it that you send with every request. They still put up that huge overlay and ask you if they may set tracking cookies.
    • And IT professionals should be doing nightly offsite backups so they don't get ransomware. A statistically rounded zero number of people know this is an option and would use it. Putting it in their face constantly so they learn will not help.

    • I've blackholed domains in my global hosts file when their websites have gotten too annoying for me. It keeps my from accidentally clicking on search results that aren't going to lead me anywhere useful, like pinterest.

    • by Bobtree ( 105901 )

      This Firefox add-on removes most cookie warnings: https://addons.mozilla.org/en-... [mozilla.org]

  • I'm very concerned in general about privacy but the current system of having to consent on every page to cookies (especially on European sites) is just annoying. What would help more if there would be on every browser a fast way to allow or deny cookies or get rid of cookies. Leave it to the user and not produce access burdens. Getting rid of cookies is possible but it requires a couple of clicks. But I don't want every time when accessing a page like google search or an amazon page to have to consent fi
    • Not a single web site is required by law to ask for cookie permissions. You don't need to ask for essential cookies (those which are technically necessary for the site to perform its user facing function), and you don't need to use any other cookies. Pestering the user with these text-book examples of hostile design is a choice that web site owners make. They don't want you to quickly reject unnecessary cookies, be it manually with an unobtrusive overlay or with a browser function. You know that you can alr
      • by MS ( 18681 )

        I fully agree - unfortunately I cannot mod you up

        I make websites for a living: without cookie-consent-popups. I don't need them. Even online shops do not need those popups.

  • So did they make more from the tracking than the fines will take away? These don't look like France being tough.

  • Dropping cookies? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by DontBeAMoran ( 4843879 ) on Thursday December 10, 2020 @02:31PM (#60816394)

    Surely they meant "creating", "adding", "updating" or "modifying".

    • by hawk ( 1151 )

      an odd choice of word, indeed.

      I figured it was antitrust for not including someone else's cookies . . .

      Maybe "pooping" would be a better word for this activity . . .

      hawk

    • You are not the only one confused. I was like "yes, I want them to drop tracking cookies. I don't want that shit at all. Why would france be angry that they are not tracking?"

      DROP cookie FROM browser WHERE idiots = 'can't use english language';

    • Surely they meant "creating", "adding", "updating" or "modifying".

      Yeah my first parse of the headline made me think they had "dropped" cookies in the same way the "dropped" Google Plus and 101 other Google products. I was prepping my outrage to comment "Well if you wanted Google to support cookies you shouldn't have forced regulations on them"

    • It was also strange to me that the author of this article somehow thought "dropping cookies" was common parlance, not in need of clarification.

      Maybe the author has a vision of google being like a rabbit visiting around the Internet and dropping "presents" everywhere it goes.
      • Dropping cookies is common parlance. I hear it all the time from marketing people. The website is dropping the cookie onto your machine. It's actually pretty clear if you know who the dropper is.

        • The author's mistake then was thinking that marketing people are a significant fraction of their article's audience, as opposed to, say, 1% of their audience.

          "Placing tracking cookies on users' devices" is clearer.

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