The fact that non-European companies can abuse their users privacy in this manner, is not a good enough reason to allow European companies to do the same. If this is the way we wanted things to be, we'd get rid of the minimum wage so we could compete with Chinese labour costs better.
It's a trade-off. We gain privacy, and some companies potentially lose some business.
The law is not enforced in the UK at all. Accordingly those who do comply are being penalised unjustly.
The ICO (body responsible for enforcing) have themselves said they probably won't prosecute people for using analytics, because even though that's against the law it's not really all that bad. That's just one example of how vague the law has become.
So we're left in a mess where no-one knows what to do, and those doing the least possible profit. Hence our stance.
Honest question -- why do we assume our actions deserve privacy on the internet, when we access someone else's site? We don't have the same expectation for e.g., when I walk into a shop (eg I may desire, but do not receive, privacy from being tracked if I were to walk into a sex toy shop).
When you visit a website, that website gets a lot more information about you than when you walk into a shop. All I want is that websites are limited to the same information as a simple shop. I published the following blog post last year which covers my thoughts on it: https://grepular.com/2011_EU_Cookie_Legislation_Opinion_of_a...
Shops don't know the last shop you visited, but websites do know the last website you visited (referrers). Shops don't assign you a unique ID the moment you walk through the door which they use to identify you on subsequent visits, websites do (cookies).
I see what you're saying. But excepting the cross-site tracking, aren't all of those privacy leaks just data that my browser is sending? Seems to me that's more my responsibility than the site owners. (FTR, I do use a bunch of the privacy controls and find trackers like the FB bug a bit creepy.)
It's a trade-off. We gain privacy, and some companies potentially lose some business.