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The GeoGuessr World Cup Is the Entertainment I Didn't Know I Needed This Week
(www.makeuseof.com)
Sub for any gaming related content!
Rules:
Unrelated to the article itself but I initially clicked on mobile and was presented with this clearly GDPR-violating prompt:
Where's the button to reject tracking? It doesn't exist.
For reference this is the correct prompt on admiral's own website:
First time I see GDPR violation this brazen. While writing this comment I finally figured out how to reject consent (clicking on "Purposes" and manually deselecting each purpose).
I double checked with remote debugging, the button is not just hidden in CSS; it's missing entirely:
For some reason I don't get a consent prompt at all from my desktop even on a brand new firefox profile – perhaps because of my user-agent?
Anyways I felt motivated today so I've sent an email to their Data Protection Officer and set a reminder for next month in case they ghost me.
Good find, I had assumed people around here would at least have uBlock Origin with at least one Annoyances filter on (or similar), this is possible via Firefox mobile as well. I didn't get the prompt as well on desktop, probably because of the Annoyances filter that blocks the consent prompts anyway.
Here's an archived link, not sure if that helps: https://archive.is/qHSPD
I have uBlock Origin but didn't bother configuring any additional filters. My desktop has consent-o-matic as well I think (which unlike a filter actually auto-rejects the tracking stuff).
However on a new profile (no extensions) I didn't get the prompt, and neither did I on chromium. Just checked on windows as well, still not prompt. So it seems to just not prompt on desktop for some reason... I wonder if that means the tracking is disabled or they just auto-consent.
Wait until you see the ones that let you choose between "Accept All" and "Subscribe to monthly plan 4.99/mo"
I saw a website like that the other week and it was based in an EU country.
Those ones are still under litigation AFAIK. Last I heard about it they lost their latest court case but it will be years before it reaches the top EU courts or an amendment is made to the GDPR.