Facebook, new suspicious disclaimer? It's just cookie law!

    You cursed it, you hated that strip (incomprehensible to many) that appears at the top and talks about things like "cookies", "data exchange" and "consent" but whether it is useful or not, in fact that thing must be there: we are speaking of the so-called “cookie law”, or rather of that warning that we are now used to seeing a little everywhere that try to explain (pretty bad, actually) what happens when the user browses a site.

    In short, nothing new but that, given what is rumored around social networks like Facebook, all those tens of thousands of hoaxes that follow one another on the net related to data theft, account theft, Facebook for a fee and pilì pilò, it is however good to underline: a starting today, cookie law also arrives on the Zuckerberg social network and reveals itself as a small information strip at the top of the page.



    Facebook, new suspicious disclaimer? It's just cookie law!

    The meaning, as we told you, is absolutely identical to what we have seen in a more or less evident way on all other European sites: Facebook collects cookies to personalize the advertisements shown and to personalize the user experience on the site. Nothing more, nothing less, anything you haven't already consented to accepting the terms of use of the service when you signed up.

    The novelty, however, is for those not subscribed to Facebook which, unlike what happened until yesterday, will be able to be tracked even without logging in: in fact, tracking is started via Facebook even for non-subscribers to the site.

    Moral of the story: don't worry because Facebook doesn't pay you, it doesn't steal your data, it doesn't do anything different than what it did yesterday or what it will do tomorrow. It's just that, albeit with a significant delay compared to the average, too Zuckerberg and his people have had to adapt to this directive otherwise it would not have been possible - at least not legally - to track who does not log in to the portal since not if they obtained explicit consent.



    Facebook, new suspicious disclaimer? It's just cookie law!

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