▲ | mytailorisrich a day ago | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
> It seems difficult to argue that DerStandard's "pay or okay" approach satisfies this Why not? Is it not necessary to pay for the service? As long as they are only processing what is necessary for the ads to work then I argue that it is necessary, and they are given a choice, too. We're going in circle a bit... And always come back to my previous point that in general those decision interpret the GDPR in the most extreme way possible, ignoring real world scenarios and the whole range of circumstances, which I can only describe as a "militant" approach. Unfortunately this is quite common on most issues these days. > I feel the problem is that as soon as one party starts using invasive ads It's not invasive ads, it's targeted ads. Targeted ads are more valuable than non targeted ads because they work better. That's it. And, frankly, if I am going to see ads I might as well see targeted ones, which at least I have a chance of finding interesting (that's the whole point) rather than having to endure tampon ads while I am reading the news. The whole thing is purely political, even ideological. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
▲ | Ukv a day ago | parent [-] | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
> Why not? It doesn't seem to allow separate consent to different personal data processing operations to be given, for one. > Is it not necessary to pay for the service? That it is possible to pay instead implies that the processing of the data is not necessary (which is taken as being objectively necessary for the core functions of the contract, not financial convenience). To my understanding the reason that "despite such consent not being necessary for such performance" wording is there in the first place is because necessity for performance of the contract is already its own basis. Their attempt to obtain freely given consent is because their purpose is not actually necessary, else they could use that on its own as the basis for the processing. > always come back to my previous point that in general those decision interpret the GDPR in the most extreme way possible, ignoring real world scenarios, which I can only describe as a "militant" approach. Unfortunately this is quite common on most issues these days. The idea that "it is necessary for our balance sheets to sell your data" would be sufficient for any and all processing seems the most extreme one to me. > It's not invasive ads, it's targeted ads. [...] And, frankly, if I am going to see ads I might as well see targeted ones, Ads targetted by building up a profile of where you live, who you interact with, what sites you browse, maybe even what you're susceptible to (FOMO, gambling), etc. GDPR doesn't prevent you from opting to receive targeted ads if you really do freely give your consent (with no detriment if you were to decline). > Targeted ads are more valuable than non targeted ads because they work better. Invasive ads work better for gaining market share in the same way a JS bitcoin miner that uses more of website visitors' GPUs works better. The first sites to deploy it get paid more, but then when all sites are using it we're pretty much back where we started (because it's largely a zero-sum game) but with waste and harm disproportionate to benefits when allowed to go too far. That's where I think it makes sense for regulation to impose a limit, to stop the downwards slide to a worse overall outcome that can happen when each party is acting in their own immediate interest. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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