I don’t know if people are noticing this but apple.com doesn’t have a cookie banner. It’s perfectly possible to operate a website – even a shop – without having a cookie banner. Even one of the biggest here in Europe in terms of revenue. As OP said, cookie banners are just malicious compliance. You don’t need one unless you’re doing shady things. Unfortunately it looks like the advertisers and trackers are winning as the EU is planing to relax the rules. I believe there would have been another way, something like banning unnecessary tracking altogether.
The EU’s oppressive regulations are based an absurd lack of understanding of how technology works. If consumers find an aspect of the protocol bothersome they have the power to use a browser or extension that makes it possible to block or disable it. We do not need a nanny state government imposing fines and threats on legitimate well intentioned websites. IMHO: Good riddance to this broken regulation.
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[ 2.6 ms ] story [ 27.4 ms ] threadDisabling javascript for the site got rid of it. It does so for many sites.
The real solution is to tighten what counts as consent.
The solution is much simpler - ban targeted ads. The entire purpose of collecting user data is to deliver targeted ads.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Do_Not_Track