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Phil (aka MP3Monster)'s Blog

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Phil (aka MP3Monster)'s Blog

Monthly Archives: June 2025

Cookie Legislation

28 Saturday Jun 2025

Posted by mp3monster in General, Technology

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

cookies, law, legislation, sexurity, Technology

Just about any web-based application will have cookies, even if they are being used as part of session management. Then, if you’re in the business-to-consumer space, you’ll likely use tracking cookies to help understand your users.

Understanding what is required depends on which part of the world your application is being used in. For the European Union (EU) and the broader European Economic Area (EEA), this is easy as all the countries have ratified the GDPR and several related laws like the ePrivacy Directive.

For North America (USA and Canada), the issue is a bit more complex as it is a network of federal and state/province law. But the strictest state legislation, such as California, aligns closely with European demands, so as a rule of thumb, meet EU legislation, and you should be in pretty good shape in North America (from a non-lawyer’s perspective).

The problem is that the EEA accounts for 30 countries (see here), plus the USA and Canada, and we have 32 of the UN’s recognized 195 states (note there is a difference between UN membership and UN recognition). So, how do we understand what the rules are for the remaining 163 countries?

I’m fortunate to work for a large multinational company with a legal team that provides guidelines for us to follow. However, I obviously can’t share that information or use it personally. Not to mention, I was a little curious to see how hard it is to get a picture of the global landscape and its needs.

It turns out that getting a picture of things is a lot harder than I’d expected. I’d assumed that finding aggregated guidance would be easy (after all, there are great sites like DLA Piper’s and the UN Trade & Development that cover the more general data protection law). But, far from it. I can only attribute this to the fact that there is a strong business in managing cookie consents.

The resources that I did find, which looked comprehensive on the subject:

  • Securiti’s Q2 2024 report
  • Bird & Bird’s Global Cookie Review
  • Termly has a good resource on this area.
  • International Association of Privacy Professionals (IAPP) – has lots of interesting resources on Cookies, but doesn’t provide a consolidated global view.

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Fluent Bit Articles on TheNewStack – a Biproduct of a book sponsor?

12 Thursday Jun 2025

Posted by mp3monster in Books, Fluentbit, Fluentd, General, manning, Technology

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

author, book, books, Fluent Bit, manning, reading, The New Stack, TNS, writing

Like many developers and architects, I track the news feeds from websites such as The New Stack and InfoQ. I’ve even submitted articles to some of these sites and saw them published. However, in the last week, something rather odd occurred: articles in The New Stack (TNS) appeared, attributed to me, although I had no involvement in the publication process with TNS; yet, the content is definitely mine. So what appears to be happening?

To help answer this, let me provide a little backstory. Back in October and November last year, we completed the publication of my book about Fluent Bit (called Logs and Telemetry with a working title of Fluent Bit with Kubernetes), a follow-up from Logging In Action (which covered Fluent Bit’s older sibling, Fluentd). During the process of writing these books, I have had the opportunity to get to know members of the team behind these CNCF projects and consider them as engineering friends. Through several changes, the core team has primarily come to work for Chronosphere. To cut a long story short, I connected the Fluent Bit team to Manning, and they sponsored my book (giving them the privilege of giving away a certain number of copies of the book, cover branding, and so on).

It appears that, as part of working with Manning’s marketing team, authors are invited to submit articles and agree to have them published on Manning’s website. Upon closer examination, the articles appear to have been sponsored by Chronosphere, with an apparent reference to Manning publications. So somewhere among the marketing and sales teams, an agreement has been made, and content has been reused. Sadly, no one thought to tell the author.

I don’t in principle have an issue with this, after all, I wrote the book, and blog on these subjects because I believe enabling an understanding of technologies like Fluent Bit is valuable and my way of contributing to the IT community (Yes, I do see a little bit of money from sales, but the money-to-time and effort ratio works out to be less than minimum wage).

The most frustrating bit of all of this is that one of the articles links to a book I’ve not been involved with, and the authors of Effective Platform Engineering aren’t being properly credited. It turns out that Chronosphere is sponsoring Effective Platform Engineering (Manning’s page for this is here).

26th June Update – another article

The New Stack published another sponsored article – What’s Driving Fluent Bit Adoption? This one does feel like it has been ‘tweaked’.

2nd July Update – and more …

Another bit of the book on New Stack – What Is Fluent Bit?

8th July Update – and more …

Another bit of the book on New Stack – What Are the Differences Between OTel, Fluent Bit and Fluentd?

Other Posts …

If you’d like to see the articles and my bio now on The New Stack:

  • Fluent Bit Core Concepts
  • Specialized Event Capture and Distribution Tool
  • The New Stack Bio

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