• PeachyMcPeachface@sh.itjust.works
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    1 year ago

    Naw, these are extremely frustrating. They make navigating websites super difficult for anyone using a screen reader. Websites are supposed to have a certain level of accessibility by law that 97% of them don’t follow.

  • SamsonSeinfelder@feddit.de
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    1 year ago

    I wish I could toggle a switch natively in firefox (without a fishy extension) to set a flag, that sites have to respect/follow. Cookie banner are only the frontend result of something that could be implemented in software. In the same way as the EU can make everyone follow these rules or get fined, they could extend the rules to acknowledge my set flag automatically in the browser or get fined. Maybe in the future… I can’t believe my children will still have to click deny on every website in the year 2030.

    • slazer2au@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      There is consent-o-matic for Firefox which will answer these for you to say reject everything. It is run by a team in a Danish University.

      • SamsonSeinfelder@feddit.de
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        1 year ago

        Do you know why it is so badly reviewed? 4.3 is not that high. I skimmed the reviews and saw some people say it only works 30% of the time and another said it “does not work in FF but in Brave” (so relatively sure its just a astroturfing comment). I see they have a github, so I could go the way of reading the JS code and package it myself into a extension somehow that never updates, but that is easier said than done.

        I really wish there were more ways to trust extensions. There are so many shady extensions who update in the background and insert malicious code on a later state when they gained track, that it is really hard for me to trust any of them. Eespecially when those Extension ask for nothing less than all my data on all my visited websites. For this reason I really would like to see this implemented natively in FF and not via an extension. Extensions are good for edge cases. The GDPR consent request is not an edge case. It is something everyone has to click several times a day. This is screaming for a permanent solution.

        • gkd@lemmy.ml
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          1 year ago

          I think I just saw a post earlier where someone noticed in the latest Android FF nightly there was an option for this built in. Maybe it will be available for desktop soon (or maybe it already is?)

          Edit: oh look the guy below talked about it and you replied 🫣

    • CanadaPlus@lemmy.sdf.org
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      1 year ago

      Yes, those banners were hard-won and are great.

      I wonder if anyone’s made a plugin that autofills them.

      Edit: Yep, looks like beta Firefox has it natively.

  • zubfop@feddit.ch
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    1 year ago

    But that one isn’t that annoying, it’s a simple one click agree/disagree by the look of it

  • dave@feddit.ukOP
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    1 year ago

    OK, replying to myself here rather than individually, as it seemed easier… Maybe I should have posted this to c/mildlyironic, but that’s what caught my attention. There’s no easy way to specify what I consent too here—their ToS, tracking cookies, it’s all or nothing†. And this is a legal requirement only if you’re storing cookies. If your website will work without cookies, just get rid of them instead of asking. If it won’t, make this the landing page and see how much traffic you get (note this would also help with accessibility).

    I do use consent-o-matic, but it didn’t help with this one. Never mind, I’m no stranger to devtools, and see this eventually as just a challenge. This site though was pretty tricky. First usual trick is to right click and ‘Inspect’ the overlay, with a view to, ahem, closing it. But this isn’t gadgethacks first rodeo—no, they have a page level click handler installed which repeats the small print, and ends with a double negative “If you do not agree, click Cancel”. There’s no way back to read the ToS or privacy policy without reloading the page.

    Oh well, lets start again and open devtools. The content is structured in 3 main bits: a <header>, a <section class="page-wrapper"> and a <footer>. Well, that’s not too bad, so we can safely delete the header & footer, and that also gets rid of the click handler. Now just a simple matter or finding where overflow: hidden is buried (only 1 div down), and a pesky position: fixed alongside it, and voila we have scroll bars.

    I could read all the way to the end of the article, and guess what? It didn’t need cookies after all.

    † Perhaps their ToS requires the use of cookies, but, TL;DR;, it doesn’t.