| ▲ | GJim 2 hours ago | |
> Missed opportunity by the EU when they wrote GDPR. Not really. There are legitimate reasons why I might wish to be tracked or give my personal data to a company. As long as I'm asked to give clear, opt-in informed consent, this is perfectly fine. This is the very essence of the GDPR! Instead, direct your ire to the scummy adtech industry who are constantly asking to invade my privacy and smell my knickers trying to work out what I ate for lunch. Another law to ban the adtech industry would be welcome from me, though would meet fierce resistance from the likes of Google. The GDPR is well written. | ||
| ▲ | wolvoleo an hour ago | parent [-] | |
> There are legitimate reasons why I might wish to be tracked or give my personal data to a company. As long as I'm asked to give clear, opt-in informed consent, this is perfectly fine. This is the very essence of the GDPR! In these cases they don't even need to ask for your permission. > Instead, direct your ire to the scummy adtech industry who are constantly asking to invade my privacy and smell my knickers trying to work out what I ate for lunch. Another law to ban the adtech industry would be welcome from me, though would meet fierce resistance from the likes of Google. No, the EU should have done more to prevent this. They didn't want to kill a billions-of-euros industry. But they should have. | ||