I believe that is true in the EU at least. Not (yet) in the US. It is easier to program sites for universal/global visitors rather than individual countries - at least initially. So even in jurisdictions where such laws do not exist, we are still seeing those prompts.
In many cases, if you allow at least the essential cookies, you will not be asked again UNLESS (or until) you clear your cookies, or the current ones expire. I said "many" not "all" or even "most".
And that is due in part because some cookies expire - but also the user (or a browser update) might have cleared saved cookies by perhaps running CCleaner or Windows Disk Cleanup.
I think this is one of those pendulum things.
Initially, users essentially had no say at all about cookies and companies (and their direct marketing weenies - but also some bad guys) went to extremes to inundate us with cookies, essential and nonessential (some potentially evil).
Then the public and regulatory agencies complained and the pendulum swung all the way to the opposite extreme. And now users are forced allow or disallow - repeatedly.
Hopefully soon, the pendulum will swing back and quickly settle somewhere in the middle where both sides can at least tolerate what happens.
Who said they don't understand why they exist in the first place? No one did so why say that? I can't believe you would quote a person, then suggest his comment implies something totally different than what he said?
Preference?
![Frown :( :(](https://tpucdn.com/forums/data/assets/smilies/frown-v1.gif)
Well sorry, it seems it is you who doesn't understand
completely why they exist. IN NO WAY do users need to set preferences for EVERY site we visit. If the user does NOT have an account there for example, and our location has nothing to do with the data we are seeking, no cookies
need to be saved.
Frick was very clear - and you quoted him! The issue has nothing to do with what cookies are or why they exist. The issue, as clearly explained by Frick and the OP too, is that these prompts keep coming back even though we have already responded to them.
How many times do you have to answer the same question before your patience runs out and it turns from a minor nuisance, to annoying to extremely irritating? My kids knew not to ask me a third time.
Frick is absolutely right. If it has been weeks, I'm okay with that. But sometimes it is just a few days (or even the next day!) I am NOT okay with that - especially when I know I already allowed at least the essential cookies, and I have not cleaned out my cookies.
The TRUTH is, if website developers and owners ONLY used cookies for their initial purpose, that is, to save language, currency and similar,
non-identifying information, for example, or authentication purposes for those sites where we do have accounts, then none of this would be an issue. But instead, cookies are frequently used to track us and target us for marketing or even malicious purposes.