I think pg is talking about the advertising banners, and yes, congratulations EU you have ruined our web experience to the benefit of even-worse-tracking that mobile applications do.
I think the bigger issue here is that this law did not fix anything, destroyed what little EU online advertising business existed, and focused on the wrong thing. For starters, the european people did not ask for this law, they have bigger problems, it was campaigned by specific german interest groups for which most EU citizens are indiffernt. Ad tracking is/was not a concern for the vast majority of EU citizens (who , again were never asked about this law) . Internet and social media addiction, however, IS an issue that most citizens have, and the EU has spent so much energy and capital on this pointless cookie banners issue, that it doesnt have more to spend on solving the addiction issue. Premature legislation always does that, and the worst is, there will never be accountability for such wrong decisions. The people who inspired the legislation are not up in some kind of election, and the upcoming MEP elections have nothing to do with EU politics and everything to do with domestic politics (Show me a country where MEP election results are not considered a proxy for national elections).
But it doesnt matter how many times someone points the political misaligments , there is no mechanism to change that until something really grave happens, when it will be too late.
I think the bigger issue here is that this law did not fix anything, destroyed what little EU online advertising business existed, and focused on the wrong thing. For starters, the european people did not ask for this law, they have bigger problems, it was campaigned by specific german interest groups for which most EU citizens are indiffernt. Ad tracking is/was not a concern for the vast majority of EU citizens (who , again were never asked about this law) . Internet and social media addiction, however, IS an issue that most citizens have, and the EU has spent so much energy and capital on this pointless cookie banners issue, that it doesnt have more to spend on solving the addiction issue. Premature legislation always does that, and the worst is, there will never be accountability for such wrong decisions. The people who inspired the legislation are not up in some kind of election, and the upcoming MEP elections have nothing to do with EU politics and everything to do with domestic politics (Show me a country where MEP election results are not considered a proxy for national elections).
But it doesnt matter how many times someone points the political misaligments , there is no mechanism to change that until something really grave happens, when it will be too late.