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UK's Cookie Laws

Started by CD123, March 22, 2012, 22:53

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CD123

New law in UK and EU about the use of cookies, which threatens many websites with closure or majorly influencing their business, including the RF sites:
http://blog.silktide.com/2011/05/cookie-law-makes-most-uk-websites-illegal-what-you-need-to-know/

gostwyck

Quote from: CD123 on March 22, 2012, 22:53
New law in UK and EU about the use of cookies, which threatens many websites with closure or majorly influencing their business, including the RF sites:
http://blog.silktide.com/2011/05/cookie-law-makes-most-uk-websites-illegal-what-you-need-to-know/

"New"? That link is 10 months old. How many legitimate websites have been closed down because of it?

CD123

#2
Quote from: gostwyck on March 23, 2012, 00:18
Quote from: CD123 on March 22, 2012, 22:53
New law in UK and EU about the use of cookies, which threatens many websites with closure or majorly influencing their business, including the RF sites:
http://blog.silktide.com/2011/05/cookie-law-makes-most-uk-websites-illegal-what-you-need-to-know/

"New"? That link is 10 months old. How many legitimate websites have been closed down because of it?

The Act got deferred for a year:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-13541250
To be introduced May 2012. No sites closed, as the Act was not introduced yet. Thousands of legitimate sites owners are panicking and looking at moving their sites overseas, as the article mentioned as a possible situation (like the few I have contact with in Brittan).  ;)

microstockphoto.co.uk

#3
I'm sure sites won't close, and will find alternatives to cookies.

However if the solution to cookies is "in-browser", it's useless to move overseas.

If the purpose of a cookie is just to pass a variable to another page, it's easily replaceable by passing variables as url arguments, e.g. ?x=1&y=2 (funny thing is there's a microstock site which even passes passwords this way in plain text, which is not very sensible)

And for tracking us, my guess is that sites will push even more on people voluntarily - or unknowingly involuntarily - giving away information (e.g. by clicking on Like, Twit, Plus and similar or by installing apps).
I just hope they won't turn to compulsory registration/login as a way to track us, which is more annoying than cookies.