• Dojan
    link
    English
    273 months ago

    I believe you’re allowed to run ads on free tiers and offer to remove them by paying. You’re not however allowed to track people without their consent, thus you can’t force personalised ads on users, and say that the only way to get rid of the privacy invasion is to pony up.

    • @NoRodent
      link
      English
      13
      edit-2
      3 months ago

      The biggest Czech website (Seznam.cz) recently changed their policy and now force you to choose between: free tier with personalised ads or paid tier with anonymous ads. Yes, you’re reading it right, even if you pay, it doesn’t get rid of ads, they just stop tracking you. I have no idea whether it’s legal but the EU should definitely take a look.

      Edit: Ok, I think they only offer you this choice when you’re using an account. I tried it in a private tab and it seems I can decline personalized ads there. Does that make it legal? If yes, then they’re some sneaky bastards.

      • Dojan
        link
        English
        153 months ago

        Yes, you’re reading it right, even if you pay, it doesn’t get rid of ads, they just stop tracking you.

        🤢🤮

        I hate what the internet has become.

        • @[email protected]
          link
          fedilink
          English
          53 months ago

          I’ve been using an ad blocker for at least 15 years. I’m not about to stop now. I can’t imagine paying only to see less relevant ads…

          • Dojan
            link
            English
            23 months ago

            Which will work great until corporations implement systems that force it onto us. Microsoft building it into the operating system. Mozilla acquiring advertising companies and implementing AI bullshit. Google edging closer to having a monopoly on browsers.

      • TJA!
        link
        fedilink
        English
        33 months ago

        IANAL, but: Gdpr only says that they cannot require you to sell your data to use a service. It does not say anything about paying with money. So this seems legal to me

        • @[email protected]
          link
          fedilink
          English
          43 months ago

          The GDPR says that if you use consent as the legal basis for processing data, such consent must be free. This means that there cannot be consequences if you give or not give the consent. If there are, then the consent is not free anymore. Paying money for a service is absolutely legal, obviously, what probably is not legal is extracting your consent by offering you a discount (which is the flipside of “pay to avoid tracking”).

          I just wanted to specify a bit, not that you said anything incorrect.

        • @[email protected]
          link
          fedilink
          English
          33 months ago

          The case is basically that having a non-tracking paid tier makes no difference, the free tier if it exists can’t include mandatory tracking.

          So they can offer a paid tier with no tracking, but they must also offer no tracking on the free tier.

          • TJA!
            link
            fedilink
            English
            13 months ago

            That’s correct. But this is only the case because of the DMA, mit the Gdpr

        • @NoRodent
          link
          English
          13 months ago

          But I mean, it’s the same thing as this FB/IG case, no? Only worse because even if you pay, you still have ads.

          • TJA!
            link
            fedilink
            English
            43 months ago

            No.

            • the Facebook case: DMA/ digital markets act. This case is only regarding the choice between personalisation or paying to access the service. Only for really big patients deemed to be gatekeepers. There are only five at the moment: https://digital-markets-act.ec.europa.eu/gatekeepers_en
            • showing ads that are personalized, or any other things where they use information about you: Gdpr. You have to allow it.
            • showing you ads that are not personalized: completely legal. Netflix does the same I think. Also Amazon prime.