Google Consent Mode v2: The Complete Implementation Guide
Implement Google Consent Mode v2 with gtag.js, GTM, and server-side GTM — correct code for all four consent signals, basic vs advanced mode, and debugging.
Fresh from the Oven: Explore our latest insights, tips, and trends in the ever-evolving world of cookies and digital privacy.
Implement Google Consent Mode v2 with gtag.js, GTM, and server-side GTM — correct code for all four consent signals, basic vs advanced mode, and debugging.
Most Canadian provinces can use opt-out consent for non-sensitive online behavioural advertising when notice and opt-out controls are clear, but Quebec requires an opt-in approach for profiling technologies. This guide maps PIPEDA, Quebec Law 25, Alberta PIPA, BC PIPA, and health privacy laws to practical banner requirements.
Yes. CookieChimp now supports Canadian province and territory targeting, so Quebec can receive an opt-in banner while the rest of Canada receives the appropriate opt-out experience.
What's coming before 2027: Connecticut's July 2026 changes, new Oklahoma and Alabama laws, UK DUAA next steps, India's DPDP deadlines, and the EU Digital Omnibus.
A cookie consent banner looks like a weekend project. Here's what a DIY build actually costs over five years — and the cases where building your own makes sense.
Opt-in cookie consent is required in the EU/EEA, UK, Brazil, South Korea, China, Saudi Arabia and Quebec. Most US states use notice and opt-out. Full 2026 map.
Brazil, Quebec, China, South Korea, Saudi Arabia, and Nigeria require opt-in cookie consent; Japan, Australia, and federal Canada don't. Full 2026 country guide.
Probably yes. What consent regulators are enforcing in mid-2026 — CNIL fines, reject-all parity, GPC, dark patterns — plus a quick banner audit checklist.
Yes, in the EU and UK pixels, fingerprinting, localStorage and SDKs need consent just like cookies. US laws are technology-neutral too. Here's what applies.
In the EU, usually yes — with narrow exemptions in France, Italy, Spain and now the UK. In the US, usually no. Here's where analytics cookies need consent in 2026.
Consent-or-pay banners can be legal — with a fair fee and a real choice. What the EDPB, ICO, CNIL and Meta's DMA fine mean for publishers in 2026.
Mostly no in the EU — blocking access unless visitors accept tracking fails the GDPR's freely-given consent test. How France, Germany, Italy, and US rules differ.