Ask HN: What's up with sites that don't allow any cookies to be disabled?
3 by kelnos | 0 comments on Hacker News.
I'm sure most of us have seen websites using "One Trust" or other services to give a standard cookie disclosure and even allow visitors to enable or disable certain cookie "classes". I've been reading MIT Tech Review's coronavirus coverage, and clicked on the "Cookie Information" link in their page banner, and was dismayed to see that all cookie classes, even the "targeting" (aka tracking) cookies are shown as "Always Active", without the ability to disable them. (Granted, I have several browser extensions that should be blocking these regardless.) Out of the sites I've visited that use this sort of cookie disclosure style, this is the first one I've noticed that doesn't allow any cookies to be disabled at all. I'm a bit dismayed that a publication put out by an institution like MIT is engaging in a practice like this. How common is this? Are there many other sites that do this that people have seen? Is there any avenue where we can evangelize to orgs that they shouldn't do this? (Example article page: https://ift.tt/3aDj9AT)
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New ask Hacker News story: Ask HN: What's up with sites that don't allow any cookies to be disabled?
New ask Hacker News story: Ask HN: What's up with sites that don't allow any cookies to be disabled?
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