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And that's the explanation: if you tell them you don't want their tracking cookies, they just ask you again a few days later in the hope that you'll get fed up and accept all their crap
But I have accepted them, why are they giving me a chance to change my mind
I was watching the latest QI last night and they covered why a robot can't tick the "I'm not a robot" box you see pop up.
Apparently, when you tick that box, there is an algorithm that scans through everything you've done in your journey to get to that point to see if it's human-like or not - right down to how you moved your mouse on the page . Basically, ticking that box means "go, on, have a good rummage"
I use matomo to track visitors to the sites I run. You can replay user sessions...
It's sites I visit at least once a week often nearly every day. Like The Register. Maybe they set the cookie to expire after a few days...
With so many sites now wanting me to look at a veritable control panel of cookie settings, I really don't want to have to keep doing it. I'll just end up "accept all" out of weariness.
Could be your browser is set to clear cookies and data when it's closed. I have this setting enabled in Firefox but they have a 'manage exceptions' override so can add sites I frequently visit so I don't get pestered every visit.
So now I just accept cookies whenever a privacy pop-up appears, knowing that most will be cleared automatically when I close the browser.
Maybe tomorrow, I'll want to settle down. Until tomorrow, I'll just keep moving on.
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