>It seems the cookie notices are annoying by design to guide public opinion against future regulatory attempts. "See what they made us do? Don't regulations stink?!"
I get that impression also, and doubly so for the FUD-packed GDPR messages. "Oh sorry, we can't legally serve this webpage to you, EU resident, because of the atrocious GDPR! (because it's full of spyware which the GDPR forbids but we won't say that part out loud)"
For what it's worth, I do think the GDPR messages are raising awareness in a way the cookie warnings were not, in part because some websites use dark patterns to get you to "agree" and others do not, and people are starting to smell the bullshit. If nothing else, the laundry list of trackers the websites are required to tell you about is a real eye-opener to the layperson who doesn't run uMatrix.
I get that impression also, and doubly so for the FUD-packed GDPR messages. "Oh sorry, we can't legally serve this webpage to you, EU resident, because of the atrocious GDPR! (because it's full of spyware which the GDPR forbids but we won't say that part out loud)"
For what it's worth, I do think the GDPR messages are raising awareness in a way the cookie warnings were not, in part because some websites use dark patterns to get you to "agree" and others do not, and people are starting to smell the bullshit. If nothing else, the laundry list of trackers the websites are required to tell you about is a real eye-opener to the layperson who doesn't run uMatrix.