Could be an interesting 2 weeks.
The article is quite hard to read. I think it comes down to this: Meta has been arguing that its Terms of Service are enough consent for data collection. European courts disagree: consent has to be explicitly given. Meta has been ignoring this ruling for 5 years now, without much consequence. Now, the EU is starting to clamp down harder - coincidentally just a few weeks before Meta will introduce a new system. In this new system users will get a choice to either consent (explicitly), or pay to use the service without data collection consent. Data privacy advocates believe this would still be illegal. However - personal opinion, not mentioned in the article - this will likely take many more years before it goes to court, let alone before it is enforced. In other words: they keep getting away with it.
MrOxiMoron@lemmy.world 1 year ago
So their solution to selling personal data was to offer a subscription so they could show you targeted ads. That feels like paying triple; the subscription, ads and personal data.
reev@sh.itjust.works 1 year ago
I believe it’s either
a) consent to ads and “enjoy” their service for free or b) pay to not have them collect data
So you’re only paying once or twice.
OpenHammer6677@lemmy.world 1 year ago
I’m not sure they’ll let go of your data that easily. They’re probably just show you less ads but still collect data