The daft and utterly pointless 'EU Cookie' law. What was the bloody point of this crass and utterly stupid piece of legislation?. "Please click if you want to accept cookies". Of course, I bloody do. The bloody website won't work unless I do. So Yes...I DO want to accept cookies.
Only the same websites ask me the same bloody question the next time I visit it. And again. This forum doesn't but perhaps it doesn't set cookies? I dunno. What I do know is that I object to wasting my time clicking on those stupid 'Yes' throughout the day when browsing.
And now that cretin Junckers is talking about yet more fiddling about. If anyone can explain this gobbledegook then I'd be grateful. A Hinton..you're usually good at this sort of thing.
"During our mandate, I would like you to focus on … supporting the vice-president for the digital single market and the commissioner for justice, consumers and gender equality in finalising the negotiations on an ambitious Data Protection Regulation in 2015," Juncker said. "On the basis of the outcome of this legislative process, you should prepare a reform of the e-Privacy Directive, liaising closely with the vice-president for the digital single market, with the support of the commissioner for justice, consumers and gender equality."....
.....Consent must be "freely given, specific and informed". An exception to this exists where the cookie is "strictly necessary" for the provision of a service "explicitly requested" by the user – for example, to take the user of an online shop from a product page to a checkout.
Information law specialist Marc Dautlich of Pinsent Masons, the law firm behind Out-Law.com, said: "The existing Data Protection Directive and the e-Privacy Directive are closely related. Some important definitions, including of 'consent', relevant to the e-Privacy rules are derived from the Data Protection Directive, so it is important that there is consistency across both instruments following the reforms to the EU data protection framework."
"It is not yet obvious from a reading of the proposed changes to consent rules under the planned data protection reforms how those rules would apply to the storage of personal information on computers under the e-Privacy Directive, so clarity on this point and other similar ones would be welcomed. Reforming the e-Privacy Directive would also provide an opportunity to improve on the way rules on cookies were altered in 2009 and address the rise of other technology that is expected to replace cookies for tracking individuals' online behaviour and the idiosyncrasies of how that technology works," Dautlich said.
Why doesn't the EU do something useful? Like insist wine producers label the list of ingredients in their wine? Or proper labelling of meat and poultry as to whether or not it is halal so that Sikhs can avoid it in accordance with their religion?
Only the same websites ask me the same bloody question the next time I visit it. And again. This forum doesn't but perhaps it doesn't set cookies? I dunno. What I do know is that I object to wasting my time clicking on those stupid 'Yes' throughout the day when browsing.
And now that cretin Junckers is talking about yet more fiddling about. If anyone can explain this gobbledegook then I'd be grateful. A Hinton..you're usually good at this sort of thing.
"During our mandate, I would like you to focus on … supporting the vice-president for the digital single market and the commissioner for justice, consumers and gender equality in finalising the negotiations on an ambitious Data Protection Regulation in 2015," Juncker said. "On the basis of the outcome of this legislative process, you should prepare a reform of the e-Privacy Directive, liaising closely with the vice-president for the digital single market, with the support of the commissioner for justice, consumers and gender equality."....
.....Consent must be "freely given, specific and informed". An exception to this exists where the cookie is "strictly necessary" for the provision of a service "explicitly requested" by the user – for example, to take the user of an online shop from a product page to a checkout.
Information law specialist Marc Dautlich of Pinsent Masons, the law firm behind Out-Law.com, said: "The existing Data Protection Directive and the e-Privacy Directive are closely related. Some important definitions, including of 'consent', relevant to the e-Privacy rules are derived from the Data Protection Directive, so it is important that there is consistency across both instruments following the reforms to the EU data protection framework."
"It is not yet obvious from a reading of the proposed changes to consent rules under the planned data protection reforms how those rules would apply to the storage of personal information on computers under the e-Privacy Directive, so clarity on this point and other similar ones would be welcomed. Reforming the e-Privacy Directive would also provide an opportunity to improve on the way rules on cookies were altered in 2009 and address the rise of other technology that is expected to replace cookies for tracking individuals' online behaviour and the idiosyncrasies of how that technology works," Dautlich said.
Why doesn't the EU do something useful? Like insist wine producers label the list of ingredients in their wine? Or proper labelling of meat and poultry as to whether or not it is halal so that Sikhs can avoid it in accordance with their religion?
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