Websites will have to ask permission to place cookie on pc. They also have to explain what it does. Law is under construction now.
new privacy law in holland to come, will affect all
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Talk about cramping up people's browsing styles. Funny I find this discussion here, I just finished writing about this topic.
The truth is the biggest and best sites the Net has to offer use cookies. Most browsers have good cookie/security level management so this isn't that big of an issue.Comment
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why would it effect my site? i didn't ask anyone from holland to come there. its their problem, not mine.you don't know you're wearing a leash if you sit by the peg all day..Comment
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What a bunch of idiots.. anyone can just disable cookies if they choose to.Comment
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to be honest first ive heard of it. dosent sound like a very good idea though, i can see the reasoning behind it. does it mean that a pop up will occur syaing this site wants to place a cookie on your computer and heres what it does, or will there have to be some sort of disclaimer?!Comment
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Europe Approves New Cookie Law
http://blogs.wsj.com/digits/2009/11/...w/tab/article/
By Marisa Taylor
The Council of the European Union has approved new legislation that would require Web users to consent to Internet cookies.
Cookies, small programs that can be used to track Web movements, have come under fire as consumer groups, including the Federal Trade Commission, have sought to regulate companies that engage in targeted behavioral advertising.
While the current EU telecom law states that cookies are allowed if Internet users are notified of them and have an opt-out option, in practice, the law has been interpreted more loosely. In the United Kingdom, for example, the information commissioner?s office issued a directive emphasizing that sites should clearly direct users to a page where they can opt out.
But once the law goes into effect, users must provide consent to cookies being stored on their computers, meaning that they could be bombarded with annoying pop-ups or pages asking for permission. The new legislation does offer an exception for when a cookie is ?strictly necessary? ? for example, if a user is shopping online, a cookie can go from a product page to the checkout page without the need for consent.
The law could have broad repercussions for online ads. ?Almost every site that carries advertising should be seeking its visitors? consent to the serving of cookies,? wrote Struan Robertson, a lawyer specializing in technology at Pinsent Masons and editor of Out-Law.com. ?It also catches sites that count visitors ? so if your site uses Google Analytics or WebTrends, you?re caught.?
The legislation is part of a draft telecom law that the EU Council recently approved and will be signed into law within the next 18 months. Its main purpose, which the Council spent months debating, was to strike a balance between cracking down on illegal downloading and broad rights to Internet use.
The Council struck down a so-called three strikes law, which would have allowed authorities to cut off Internet access to repeat online-piracy offenders. Instead, it ensures that Web users engaging in illegal downloads must be given a trial that guarantees the ?right to be heard? before Internet access is shut off.
Mr. Robertson said, however, that the bigger argument over three strikes caused the new cookie provisions to go unnoticed. ?The consent standard is surely closing the loophole we?ve all been exploiting,? he wrote in an op-ed last month. He said the law will tempt businesses to break the rules and that ?to legislate against the technology is unnecessary, short-sighted and destined to fail.?
And more...
Consent will be required for cookies in Europe
http://www.out-law.com/page-10510Comment
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OK so a session cookie that lasts for lets say. 10000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000 00000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000 00000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000 00000000000000000000000036363 hours.PornGuy skype me pornguy_epic
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It's a part of new EU legislation being put in place. You need to disclose that you are puttign a cookie on the users computer and what information it collects and how it handles it. Already put into law in for example Sweden.
However, the effect of the new EU law is very sporadic, it only affects sites which are hosted in that specific country where the law is applicable. So if you are hosted in the US for example, you don't need to bother about this at all and can easily continue without any further ado.----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The truth is not affected by the beliefs, or doubts, of the majority.Comment
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if i remember correctly, session cookies last as long as your session is active or until specified time limit but no longer than active session itself. if session employs real cookies then session technically can be interrupted and restored again on next visit.Comment
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Well as far as I'm concerned cookies (which BTW as everyone here should know are not "small programs that can be used to track web movements") are necessary for my sites to work properly. If my page can't tell whether you've visited before and what thumbnails you clicked on, it won't work the way I intended it to, therefore it needs to put a cookie on your PC and doesn't need to ask permission. So, as far as I'm concerned the issue is closed.Comment
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Posted about this law proposal in November 2009:
http://www.gfy.com/showthread.php?t=938964
Most law proposals, not all, become a reality within a year or so normally.Comment
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Holland, great place to visit. Your strength lies in your continued belief that what you just ate was indeed duck.Comment
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Most law proposals become law? Really? I think we have the opposite. Our people come up with so many stupid ass laws... fortunately only a fraction of the stupid ass laws get through.Posted about this law proposal in November 2009:
http://www.gfy.com/showthread.php?t=938964
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Be glad not all stupid laws pass over there!
Downside to all the law making is that it is always triggered by incidents of people taking advantage of the surfers. And laws are based on those and not on the 80% of the companies doing decent business practises and which can be hurt by the new laws caused by the other 20% doing malicious business.Comment
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Privacy law in Holland. Sounds good. Computers need more privacy and less viruses and less adware and spyware. Don't risk harming your computer. Do not visit the sites you do not want to visit.
Can you set your brain to high privacy settings so that other people don't read your brain? Good luck with that. Hopefully the mind readers can't read your pin number in your bank account. Protect your bank account now with more features.Last edited by fatfoo; 04-21-2010, 04:05 PM.Send me an email: [email protected]Comment
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I don't get Jack for traffic from Holland so im not too concerned. Overall I think it's a retarded law. Having solved all other crimes they're new focus is cookies? Sighs... I wonder what took place to make someone even think the need to draft up this law? Curious on the details
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