this post was submitted on 18 Aug 2024
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Of course it's the website fault, but just like government don't let companies do whatever they want (all the time) the have to force websites to not do certain things, a warning certainly doesn't do much when people keep clicking "accept".
It's the EU's fault that there is that warning in the pages(which is what the OP is talking about in how clean websites are) a warning that doesn't fix the real problem, just puts a sign on it.
"WET FLOOR!" instead of fixing the leaking pipe.
It's not just a warning, it's also an option to reject.
Some don't give you an option, but actually have a much cleaner interface imo.
Whether or not it's better since you still have to click OK, some don't let you reject them at all.
If you can't reject, they either don't need the pop-up, or they're not in compliance with the law. Either way it's in no way the fault of the lawmakers.