GDPR, I'm hoping that I don't have to bother my users with a "do you consent to" popup when the only thing I want to do is to log server-side the API calls so that I can see patterns in usage and such. If I were to show such a "do you consent to" popup users might mistakenly think I'm one of those techcrunchers with hundreds of data partners that all get to see your PII. I do not want to affiliate myself with those type of actors.
I look at the map then take a sip of whiskey. Map, whiskey. Then I suck the last of the whiskey from the ice cubes while cracking open another bottle. Map, whiskey. Day dream a little.
Our ancestor's sleep might not have been optimal due to the fact we had other things to care about, like shelter. But that does not imply there is nothing to gain from feeling perfectly rested.
> So a cookie only knows the website that referred me?
Not really. Instead, each time you return to a site that has set a cookie on your computer, that cookie is included in the request header.
That same site will also know about your last visited page, even if it's outside of their domain, because of the "referer" frpm the request header.
> So if I copy paste the website in the address bar, they dont learn anything about my last browsing habit?
If you do that, then the referer will be empty and whatever site you visit will not know what you did last.
Cookies are just one thing. Web beacons i.e. tracking pixels, and the fact that companies utilizing those to suck up data about web users sell it feely to others for the sake of targeted marketing, is the reason you see peronalized ads all over the internet whenever you've finalized an online purchase.
It's good that there is such an alternative as GitLab, because there is a slight but still not unsignificant risk that MS will not do the right thing. I think they will though since they are power users of their own product. I'm hoping they know this space.
All of a sudden HN has divided into EU vs US on basic human rights? This seems odd. I don't think you guys really think there is anything wrong with GDPR, not in its implementation nor in its sentiment. I really don't. The reason you are whining like crazy though is because you are in a project where the deadline/budget did not take into account this new EU law.
Hey, blame the ones who planned your project, not the EU.
I guess our visions aren't aligned then. Anyone into the sport of making money would agree that SEO is a good thing but the way you sell it to me I'd want to kill myself before I work for you guys.
Nightwatch, you produce market speak aimed towards the completely wrong tree.
It's probably a retorical tool but not used to trick you into doing something you didn't want to do in the first place but instead used to asure you that all the "ordinary" remedies were visited but they were unhelpful.
- opinions are never the equivalent of spreading FUD
- classifying an opinion as FUD is a slippery slope that will lead to an Orwellian dystropy
Here's an opinion:
- Linux is a terrible operating system, because it is open-source. Open-source software does not allow you to capitalize on the work you put down. Anarchy will arise when all software is open-source.
What you are doing in this thread is the definition of spreading fear, uncertainty and doubt around the institution called "EU". I'm personally not against you doing just that. I'm just against you trying to call it something else.
Boiling down what you have actually said in this thread I'm left with "but the EU spends money on things that _I_ wouldn't have". Is that the gist of what you are trying to convey here? Or are you opposed to EU as a concept?
So, cucumber regulation seems very silly indeed. Hopefully we have gotten to the stuff that matters now.
> Do you honestly believe that the average citizen wants highly paid bureaucrats in Brussels debating on how much power a vacuum cleaner should draw?
I certainly do. Wait, there is no equivalent discussion of power draw of vacuum cleaners in the US? Well, then the EU might be at the forefront of consumer electronics regulations and in the end, that's very good for me.
I know, isn't the future great? To read a web page, just enter an url in chrome, once it has loaded go ahead and click "yes you may track me" then finally "reader mode" and the world is yours.