I’ve never read an answer from an attorney specializing in GDPR, but I’ve been seeing this for years. It’s very popular in Germany and seems to have spread to the rest of the EU.
I assume it’s catching on more recently because I’ve started to see people asking about it online more frequently.
In my layman’s understanding, it’s compliant with the law because they still provide a way to opt out of cookies and no one is entitled to read their articles for free.
So the choice is pay or allow tracking.
Tbh, you can easily just open the link in an incognito window, or if you’re paranoid, an incognito/private window of a browser you never use. Then once you close the window, their cookies get wiped anyway.
You pay with your privacy, which I believe isn’t permitted (Don’t quote me, I don’t know anything). It’s basically the same thing Meta is doing. If you could see the ads without the additional tracking (ie. generalized ads) that would be fine.
I’ve never read an answer from an attorney specializing in GDPR, but I’ve been seeing this for years. It’s very popular in Germany and seems to have spread to the rest of the EU.
I assume it’s catching on more recently because I’ve started to see people asking about it online more frequently.
In my layman’s understanding, it’s compliant with the law because they still provide a way to opt out of cookies and no one is entitled to read their articles for free.
So the choice is pay or allow tracking.
Tbh, you can easily just open the link in an incognito window, or if you’re paranoid, an incognito/private window of a browser you never use. Then once you close the window, their cookies get wiped anyway.
You pay with your privacy, which I believe isn’t permitted (Don’t quote me, I don’t know anything). It’s basically the same thing Meta is doing. If you could see the ads without the additional tracking (ie. generalized ads) that would be fine.