

The Court of Justice of the European Union delivered a ruling on October 1, 2019, which stated that businesses must obtain active, freely given, specific, informed, and unambiguous consent from consumers before storing cookies in their devices.
The Court of Justice of the European Union delivered a ruling on October 1, 2019, which stated that businesses must obtain active, freely given, specific, informed, and unambiguous consent from consumers before storing cookies in their devices.
The CJEU’s specific directive was that opt-out consent through a pre-checked checkbox is not adequate consent for the storage of cookies in users’ devices. This ruling applies to any website that employees tracking cookies, a majority of which do not seek GDPR-level consent.
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This case was brought to the CJEU after Planet49, a German online gaming company, presented its customers wishing to take part in its online lottery with two checkboxes whereby:
The German Federation of Consumer Organizations challenged Planet49’s practice of obtaining consent in the German courts and eventually asked the CJEU to interpret EU law to clarify whether consent by pre-checked boxes is a valid form of consent in general across the Union.
Question 1: Is a pre-checked checkbox that the user must actively untick to withdraw their consent constitute valid consent under the ePrivacy Directive, as well as the Data Protection Directive (DPD) and the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)?
CJEU Ruling: Pre-checked boxes to obtain cookie consent do NOT constitute valid consent according to Recital 17 of the ePrivacy Directive, Article 32 of the GDPR or the DPD. The Court expressed that the consent must constitute a freely given, specific and informed indication of users' wishes, which may be manifested in the form of "ticking a box when visiting an internet website"
Question 2: Does it matter whether the data stored or accessed using cookies is personal information?
CJEU Ruling: Regardless of whether cookies process personal data or not, clear, active consent is required from users.
Question 3: What kind of disclosures must be made to users as part of the transparency requirements of the ePrivacy Directive?
CJEU Ruling: Website operators must make prior disclosures to consumers about;
(i)The duration for which their data is processed in line with the GDPR
(ii)Whether or not third parties have access to the information, and if so, which third-parties
Following the cookie ruling, businesses need to;
Secure Privacy is a software solution that helps you handle cookie consent, monitoring, and control on your website in line with the requirements of the GDPR.
For additional queries or concerns, book a call with us today for personalized support on how to manage cookies on your website and become GDPR compliant.
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