...and let the world wide web stop torturing me. I have a nice button that clears cookies and websites can't do anything about it. This whole dance is stupid.
It's easy enough to block cookies with an extension, but I'm sick of wasting time clicking the damn banners.
This should be controlled by the browser not the site. Let the site do whatever it wants to try to track, but let my browser do whatever it wants to prevent that.
I honestly appreciate this bit of twisted propaganda. It's like you put up a barbed-wire fence with a gate in it, and people objected to the barbed-wire fence, so you put up a 1meter brick wall that people have to climb over. Whenever people complain about the wall, you say "Hey, the fence had a gate in it! But nobody wanted to play ball..."
But incognito will not save you. Your browser can be fingerprinted even in incognito. That's why gdpr exists.
Also it's strange how your default proposed flag is in favor of tracking. Why not have a flag that is defaulted to notrack:true instead?
Sigh. Because OP doesn’t give a fuck. It’s right there.
You’re proposing DNT flag. We’ve been there, done that, it failed.
Pragmatically, the opposite flag has a better chance of being adopted, because it aligns incentives - both parties get what they want: the website can track me (and really: some people don’t give a fuck and don’t need lectures on the wrongness of their ways), I get less annoying UI.
Keep in mind the cookie law doesn't just apply to browser cookies, but to other kinds of fingerprinting too. Your proposal would let you be tracked in a persistent way through canvas, localstorage and other forms of entropy easily retrieved from your browser that deleting cookies will not help against.
"Clear cookies" clears local storage, indexeddb, and the other obvious places. Of course that leaves evercookie-type tracking, but the folks using those techniques are not likely to care about about consent. And frankly you'd be better off just simply banning those techniques outright. Or better yet, make them impossible in the browser in the first place.
The "can I track you?" question does not add value.
Fuck the law. Defend yourself with technical measures that actually work. You wanna make a law that helps? Give safe-haven protections to Tor exit nodes.