Nothing tells me more that you care about my privacy than sharing my data with hundreds or thousands of companies.
Read the code https://github.com/cavi-au/Consent-O-Matic ? Check the cookie after it has been set?
It’s a valid question and if it wasn’t both open-source and popular the doubt would be very justified. Here with so many eyes interested in the topic, the lack of proper reward for the risk, I would argue it’s quite a safe bet.
I don’t know how to read code (like what I would wager is most of the population), so that wouldn’t help much, and is another reason for doubt.
Knowing that it’s open source definitely helps, but I still worry that the pop ups get updated at a faster rate than the extension does, and unlike with an adblocker, I wouldn’t necessarily be able to tell.
As I said, I’ll keep it in mind, but at this point avoiding the worst offending sites is still easier (with added bonus that I deprive them of my traffic).
By watching it.
There are 2 operating modes. Hide and picture in picture. Using picture in picture mode you can watch it do it’s thing.
Using picture in picture mode you can watch it do it’s thing.
Fair enough. Still sounds like more trouble than it’s worth (having to look at it do it’s thing each time, because each site has its own version, and they also change them regularly. Yes, I have trust issues), there’s rarely anything behind the worst cookie pop ups that can’t be found elsewhere.
I appreciate the info though, thanks. If things get bad enough I might not have a choice but to at least automate the process if I can no longer avoid it.