• Rikudou_SageA
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    -36 months ago

    I disagree, no one is by law obligated to provide free services for you. Either pay or have ads is fine by me.

    And DMA does not care about your local newspaper site, unless they’re so big that they’re a gatekeeper. Ruling based on DMA does not affect anyone but the gatekeepers.

    • @sandbox@lemmy.world
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      136 months ago

      Pay or have ads is fine by the EU’s DMA law too. What isn’t fine is the collection of user data without consent. Facebook can show all the ads they want, but if they collect user data to target those ads they need consent.

      Think about radio or TV advertising - those aren’t targeted at specific people, but rather they’re targeted based on what channel, time of day and TV shows that they’re around. Meta can do the same stuff, but they just don’t want to give up that lucrative user data.

      • Rikudou_SageA
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        -46 months ago

        I obviously meant ads that track you, didn’t know I have to spell it out. So to clarify, I was talking about the tracking kind of ads which need user consent. My point was that giving consent or paying is fine in my book, because you have a choice and no one is entitled to a free service. And that even if DMA decides it’s not, it doesn’t concern anyone but a few select companies.

        To be fair, I’m like 80% sure it was perfectly clear in the original comment as well.

        • @sandbox@lemmy.world
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          56 months ago

          I was making the point that ad-supported services have been financially viable for centuries without needing to invade personal privacy, and that governments have been regulating industries for even longer - and at this point, your personal choice doesn’t really matter. You might be perfectly happy to eat food cooked in an unhygienic kitchen, for example, but enough people have been harmed in the past for food hygiene regulations to be commonplace worldwide.

    • @ASDraptor@lemmy.autism.place
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      66 months ago

      It’s not about having free services but flawed consent. I can’t give you my consent if it’s either pay or accept tracking tracking. That’s not a free consent, and that’s what’s being ruled here. Give me a paywall, I’m fine with it. But don’t you go saying you’re giving me a free choice when it’s either pay or screw your privacy. That’s not consent, that’s extortion.

      • Rikudou_SageA
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        06 months ago

        That’s a choice, my choice is to back away or use an anonymous window and accept the tracking if I really want to see the content.

        It’s just another paywall, it just gives you the option of paying with your data. It’s your choice what’s more valuable.

        But I get it, people want choices shoved down their throats, they don’t want to actually choose. That’s why paywall is fine, but paywall with free-with-tracking-option is the big bad. No one forces you to give your consent, give it or don’t, it’s up to you.

        You don’t want the choice to consent, you want to be angry at someone about something.

        • @ASDraptor@lemmy.autism.place
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          16 months ago

          You don’t get it. The problem is that the consent is not free. I can’t give my consent to be tracked if the alternative is to pay a fee. It’s as simple as that. The consent must be given without flaws, I can’t be forced to accept the tracking, because then it’s not a consent. You should stop shilling for corpos.

          • Rikudou_SageA
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            16 months ago

            You’re not forced. And I’m not shilling anyone, for all I care Meta can collapse, I don’t use any of their products because of their tracking. See, I made my choice, you want to push your choice onto others, big difference.