You can't require permission if the default action is spoofing. This is how I think all privacy-related features should be implemented. If I don't want a website to use cookies, the browser shouldn't let the website know it can't. It should just pretend to let it use it, while forgetting the cookie when the browser is closed.
As a side note I think prompts like 'letting website track your identity' is misleading and infantilizing. Just let user know what is being accessed, like
- Do you want this website to know when you left the page? We won't let them know if you don't.
- Do you want to allow this website to save cookies? If you don't, all cookies from this site will be cleared when you close the browser.
At this point, we need to acknowledge that browsing the web safely is essentially an adversarial game against adtech and spyware companies. If we don't fight with all our might, we'll just lose. This isn't 2005 anymore. I too wish we could go back, but we can't.
Hard agree. The proper place for cookie permission management is in the browser. The web as a whole needs need to move on from these obnoxious pop-up cookie warnings ASAP.
> The web as a whole needs need to move on from these obnoxious pop-up cookie warnings ASAP.
Those obnoxious cookie pop-ups can go away today. No browser intervention necessary.
You know why? They only exist because the greedy industry really wants to collect and sell your private information at scale. No other reason. So the companies could remove those popups today if they cared.
If you move the dialog to the browser, you will have both the browser dialogs and the non-cookie dialogs (because they will still want to fingerprint you, and collect your data, and sell it)
As a side note I think prompts like 'letting website track your identity' is misleading and infantilizing. Just let user know what is being accessed, like
- Do you want this website to know when you left the page? We won't let them know if you don't.
- Do you want to allow this website to save cookies? If you don't, all cookies from this site will be cleared when you close the browser.
At this point, we need to acknowledge that browsing the web safely is essentially an adversarial game against adtech and spyware companies. If we don't fight with all our might, we'll just lose. This isn't 2005 anymore. I too wish we could go back, but we can't.