get your own DMP or trust the third-party DMP provider doesn't use your data for anything other then your needs https://piwik.pro/blog/data-management-platform-dmp-for-publishers/
What are the other big problems with GDPR?
Is this a cookiebox you would think is GDPR proof? https://piwik.pro/gdpr-consent-manager/
It does use a trick in making most people think you'd just accept two options while you actually 'Accept All' but it's so obvious that this OK for GDPR?
Seems like this is good for getting the most consents while still making it so obvious what you're choosing to make it 100% GDPR proof.
I'm currently implementing GTM so the question is somewhat relevant to me. While we don't do business in the EU, we might some day. I did a bit of research and from what I can tell, as long as you make the method of providing consent clear, you should be good.
https://piwik.pro/blog/how-will-gdpr-affect-your-web-analytics-tracking/
And I know that GTM is powerful and flexible enough to fire only when the right triggers are there so... while I'm not a lawyer, from a technical perspective I don't see how this can't be achieved with the right triggers, which can be an event pushed into the datalayer based on a checkbox click or something.
This could very likely be an illegal use of PII. Marketers are not allowed to share personally identifiable information (like tying an email address back to a person's legal name or home address).
While the RNC has their voter's permission to store their PII, they likely don't have permission to share it. I don't know the legal relationship between the RNC and Deep Root Analytics, but I'd be highly skeptical that they had consent to share their voter's PII to any 3rd party analytics firm. Use of this data for any advertising or marketing purposes would also likely be a violation of the Privacy Act of 1974.
The wikipage gives a good overview of this statute, and this page also has some concise info on the legality of PII use in advertising. Definitely worth a skim-through so you know your rights with this stuff. Educate yoself!
It's fine to have color; it's faster to recognize color and shape than it is too recognize text. But they could at least wash the colors in a similar tint or shade to give them a color scheme. Each one being it's own standalone vibrant color is what stands out to me.
The difference between the top vs. the bottom in this image.
Just a simple tinted color wash would pull them all together and make it much more cohesive, IMO.
We (Neeva) use Piwik for our marketing site and homegrown for the app (logged-in users). It was a pain finding a privacy-first analytics provider, though.
Many analytics providers either are meant for marketing pages and want to combine reams of 3rd party data, violating user privacy, or exclusively for in-app analytics and not marketing use cases at all. Finding an analytics provider that is both privacy-first and meant for marketing/acquisition goals is tough.
We could've made a number work like Matomo, Amplitude or Mixpanel, but they either lacked strong adoption and support, such as Matomo, or would be a lot of upfront work to configure and setup in a privacy safe way, such as Amplitude or Mixpanel.
We ended up going with Piwik, which uses the same underlying tech as Matomo, because we had confidence given its relative size, better support tier and ease of setup it was a good first place to start.
I think it's a good idea and has a market but there's other analytics services that also focus on privacy and security such as https://piwik.pro/. These are not free and a free version of this would make me question the legitimacy of the service and how it makes money. Free does not necessarily come off as better I would say.
Google has a history of everywhere you've been but cnn.com probably hasn't been tracking where you've been reading their articles from until the past 6 months to a year.
Sites are getting more interested in where the user is when they are taking in the content. You can collect everything on someone if you want. Name, birthday, address, city, state, zip, email, google account, facebook account. But if you use Google Analytics you cannot store any personal identifiers there. You'd have to store them on your own servers or in a cloud storage or hash them before storing them.
Here's what's considered PII and what's not.
https://piwik.pro/blog/what-is-pii-personal-data/
Google can hold all that, but I can't if I'm using google analytics.
Depending on what you use Eg. Shopify, WP etc. you can get "GDPR" specific addons that should take care of this without costing you 5k... Take a look at how-will-gdpr-affect-your-web-analytics-tracking.
Shopify GDPR pluggin $9,99/month
It’s not. It PI (GDPR) not PII (https://piwik.pro/blog/what-is-pii-personal-data/).
The ‘risk’ of releasing photos of public people at a public event, when it was allowed and even expected to take photos, is not something the regulators are currently worried about.