This Leipzig ruling is notable, but the practical impact may be more limited than the €5,000 figure suggests. While the court explicitly said users don't need to prove individual damages to sue, European class action mechanisms are still quite different from US-style litigation.
Germany doesn't have the same litigation incentive structures as the US - no contingency fees, loser-pays costs, and relatively limited collective redress options. Most German consumers aren't going to file individual €5,000 lawsuits over tracking pixels, especially given the legal costs and time involved.
Personally, I hope this gets picked up by a consumer protection organization or a well-funded litigation group. Germany has been gradually expanding its collective action framework, but it's still primarily driven by qualified entities rather than individual plaintiffs.
In Sweden I've seen quite a few businesses sprung up for that, collecting overpaid rent through a legal firm.
Completely agree that if it's a similarly straightforward process there will be businesses offering to litigate on the users' behalf and collect a fee, I'd be jumping on it if I only had to file a report and wait for the work to be done to collect a couple thousand €.
It definitely does for canceled/delayed flight tickets. Some years ago we had a flight that was canceled in the last minute by TAP and we missed one day from our trip. We got 600€ back from each ticket just by signing up to a website and sending the ticket receipts.
Germany doesn't have the same litigation incentive structures as the US - no contingency fees, loser-pays costs, and relatively limited collective redress options. Most German consumers aren't going to file individual €5,000 lawsuits over tracking pixels, especially given the legal costs and time involved.
Personally, I hope this gets picked up by a consumer protection organization or a well-funded litigation group. Germany has been gradually expanding its collective action framework, but it's still primarily driven by qualified entities rather than individual plaintiffs.