Subscription Management Platforms under the GDPR - A technical study of Subscription Management Platforms
Abstract
In recent times there has been an increase in cookie tracking, where users’ data
are collected through web cookies. Due to privacy concerns, many regulations have
been developed — such as the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) —, to
regulate information gathering. To ensure compliance with the GDPR, cookies tend
to be managed through cookie banners, where users can 1) accept all, 2) reject all, or
3) customize their choice regarding which data can be collected. Recently, there has
developed a new cookie paywall, where instead the choices are to either 1) accept
all tracking or 2) subscribe to a service to avoid tracking and advertisements. The
services providing these cookie paywalls have been named Subscription Management
Platforms (SMPs), and the goal of this thesis is to discover what SMPs are technically
and legally under the GDPR, and how they relate to standard cookie banners. The
results show that SMPs can work as a wrapper to existing cookie banners, where
all subscribed users automatically reject all cookies but the non-subscribed must
accept all cookies. In this case, the legal responsibility falls to the cookie banner,
as the SMP does not handle the consent signal. Additionally, we found that SMPs
can collect at least as much information and personal data as regular cookie banners.
We also raise several questions about the nature and ethics of SMPs. As SMPs force
users who do not pay to accept all tracking, they essentially make privacy a luxury
and may increase cookie tracking.
Degree
Student essay
Collections
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Date
2024-10-16Author
Rosengren, Björn
Sjögren, Sebastian
Keywords
Cookies
Cookie tracking
SMP
CMP
GDPR
CNAME cloaking
contentpass