> El 24 ago 2017, a las 07:41, Jaroslaw Staniek <[email protected]> escribió: > >> On 24 August 2017 at 11:10, Adriaan de Groot <[email protected]> wrote: >> >> Curiously, there's a lot of "telemetry policy" news items popping up this >> week, for instance: >> >> Mozilla ponders making telemetry opt-out, 'cos hardly anyone opted in >> >> (that's on the Register) and there were others. So it looks like >> communication >> -- what's the data for, why is it collected, and what can happen to it -- is >> key here. >> >> [ade] > > Speaking of that please let me play devil's advocate. In Europe, > especially Poland all web sites/web apps that collect cookies must > obtain permission to do that from the user. Interestingly there are > usually OK buttons only so the message is only an information. > Sometimes there is "Don't agree" button which is equal to close the > site. So telemetry-like behavior even lacks opt-out. > > [...] > > I can imagine we would make our pages work without cookies and add > opt-in buttons to each main site. > > Now KDE context since there's visible call to make privacy our pillar topic: > 1. Does www.kde.org for example use cookies?
Yes, and we show the comply-with-Europe-law banner letting the user know about those cookies. We also follow the browser Do Not Track setting and we don't collect statistics if that is set. -- Nicolás KDE Sysadmin Team
