Options to manage the main text content of your banner.
Content: Text content (supports HTML formatting and links).
Font color: Text color.
Background color: Background color of the content area.
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In this section, you will find information about Consent configuration on Platform Commanders Act
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The collection of personal information is regulated by law at European level with the GDPR.As a European player, Commanders Act fits into this framework and pays particular attention to the governance of its data.This page explains the positioning of Commanders Act and that of its customers within this regulatory framework.
Under RGPD rules, Commanders Act acts as a data processor. Therefore, Commanders Act is responsible for the following obligations:- maintain data security- continuously improve security processes- duty of cooperation, in particular in the event of control by the CNIL- appointment of a data protection officer- keep a processing register- notify any data breach to the data controller
Customers of Commanders Act, users of the platform, are considered data controllers. Therefore their obligations are:- decide on the purpose of the processing (reasons for the processing, categories of data)- decide on the means of processing (retention period, recipient, right of opposition, right of rectification)Commanders Act puts its technical expertise at the service of its customers in order to guarantee the protection of users' personal data.As your partner and processor, we are at your disposal for all questions on data protection subjects.
In this section, you will find information about Consent setup on your website(s) and mobile application(s)
Increase brand loyalty by allowing users to control the data collected about them & establish trust through transparency.As a result of the increasing number of data breaches and the misuse of personal information, privacy management is a growing part of the modern marketing landscape.The General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) has largely been perceived as a legal issue, due to the fines that can be imposed because of non-compliance, but it’s also created opportunities for brands to build greater trust with their users. In fact, according to research conducted by iProspect, 88% of global marketers say trust is a priority in 2019, and they are looking to build this trust through credibility, relevancy, and reliability.Fueled by consumer privacy laws like the GDPR, most marketers are turning to solutions like Commanders Act CMP that alert website and mobile app users of the personal data that’s being captured, stored, and shared with third parties.This documentation will provide you with an overview of Commanders Act CMP, setup guides per platform, user guides per feature and a knowledge base for frequently asked questions.ComponentsCommanders Act CMP consists of following components:
Component
Description
Privacy banner
Banner that is shown to visitors to inform them about privacy settings and to ask for permission to collect their personal data.
Privacy center
Banner that provides fine-grained privacy controls for website visitors for different privacy categories, vendors or tools. The privacy center is usually linked in the privacy banner and privacy policy.
Privacy manager
A technical layer below the privacy banner and privacy center that manages and stores the privacy settings of the visitor. It connects with other tools like tag managers to control which features, services or tags are loaded for a visitor based on his privacy settings.
Privacy cookies
First party cookies that are used to store the privacy settings of a user.
Privacy log
A database that logs visitor consent settings so that they can be proofed in case of an information request by the visitor.
Categories
Groups of services and features that require personal data. These categories are used by the privacy center to present consent controls and are used by the privacy manager to communicate privacy settings to other tools. Typical categories are "Analytics" and "Personalisation".
Vendors
Individual services and vendors that require personal data. These vendors are used by the privacy center to present consent controls and are used by the privacy manager to communicate privacy settings to other tools. Typical vendors are e.g. "Google" and "Facebook".
Dashboard
Dashboard that provides performance KPIs of each privacy banner.
OnSite API
Allows to interact with Consent module with code.
Commanders Act CMP supports following frameworks:
IAB TCF 2.0 (v2.2 will be supported before September 30)
Google ACM
It is possible to extend Commanders Act CMP with following modules:
These modules are set up and configured by a Commanders Act consultant.
Please refer to the Setup Guides section for detailed installation instructions of Commanders Act CMP per platform. In case your platform is not listed you can reach out to a Commanders Act consultant for a custom implementation.
Google recommends that GTM customers use our This template includes the Google Consent Mode feature.
For further information, please read the documentation
In this section, you will find a complete guide to integrate Commanders Act Consent banners in your Google Tag Manager
Enclosed you'll find two sample configuration files, a very simple setup that you'll need to reproduce you'll need to reproduce on your site. The first and most common configuration is the gtm_category_template.json, a category-based configuration (example with only 1 category). The other possibility is a vendor-based configuration, with only the Cact allows Statistical variable changing in gtm_partner_template..json.
In GTM, create a new account so as not to overwrite your current configuration.
In this new test account, go to Admin, then on the right side of the screen click on Import Container and select the file attachment gtm_category_template.json
Observe the configuration to constrain a simple Google Analytics page view tag
"Google Analytics Page view" is only a basic tag example, "Cact consent given Statistical" trigger is applied on
"Cact consent given Statistical" which triggers the page view tag as soon as the user has given consent on a first visit. consent has been given by the user on a first visit. The page view hit from consent pushes a tcConsentChanged event in GTM's dataLayer for each interaction with the privacy module
"Cact consent given Statistical" is an arbitrary name, you can call it "Consent on page view for Analytics" or "Consent Analytics".
It is dedicated to a specific category, you will need to create "Cact on page view Advertising" and/or "Consent on page view Functional" for example, depending on your needs.
"Cact consent given Statistical" should also be reproduced and adapted for your other categories and coupled with custom triggers
The trigger should therefore refer to the variable for its category and trigger the associated tag if it returns "allowed"
"Cact - User consent": will return different values, depending of user consent choice (no_consent, optout, all_consent or the list of consent categories IDs accepted by the user)
"Cact allows Statistical": return "allowed" or "refused", depending of the choice of the user *Don't forget to personalize the ID with the value of your own setup on the Commanders Act Platform
"GA4 - ID": Change this value by your own GA4 - ID
"Browser language": will detect the browser language, do not modify this variable. It will be helpful if you have a multi-language website
To make your tags are submitted to user consent, you need to verify consent in each of your triggers
Steps to implement Consent Module with TMS Commanders Act
Consent Module and TMS Commanders Act are natively integrated with each other. This setup requires minimal technical knowledge and can be done entirely in the interface.
Following you will find the required steps to implement a standard Commanders Act Consent module setup.
Choose the default account configuration mode for your account (see ).
Setup your Consent categories & vendors (see ).
Assign your Consent categories & vendors to your Commanders Act Web Container tags (see )
Create one or multiple Consent banner templates (see )
Deploy your Consent banner templates to the Commanders Act CDN or on premise target (see ).
Connect your privacy banner templates with Commanders Act Web Container and implement rules for which the banner should be played out (see below).
To deploy a Consent banner with the Commanders Act TMS it needs to be linked to a container. Commanders Act TMS can then be use to implement detailed rules for which a Consent banner is shown to visitors.
Implement rules to display Consent banners
Sources > Overview > Web Containers > tab RULES > Privacy Banners Constraints
In Commanders Act TMS it is possible to provide exact conditions to decide when each of the linked privacy banners should be shown to visitors. Typical use cases consist of:
Implement different banner for different languages or regions
Avoid to deploy the banner on legal pages (privacy policy) so that users can read them before providing consent.
Implement AB test for two banner designs.
You can create constrains under the PRIVACY BANNERS
section to define under which conditions a privacy banner should be shown. Privacy banner constraint work the same way as tag constraints. Please reference constraints in the Web Container documentation for more information.
Sources > Overview > Web Containers > tab GENERATE
Commanders Act TMS makes it easy to implement Consent banner on websites. To link a privacy banner with a Commanders Act TMS container it just has to be activated in the GENERATE
tab with the ACTIVATION
checkbox. This installs the selected privacy banner in the generated container version.
All web containers of your website should be re-generated and deployed when installing a new privacy banner.
The OnSite API allows you to reload your container(s) on consent, manage behaviour or create custom variables/rules!
To reload your web container(s) on user consent, here's a sample code that you can use in the custom js block of your privacy banner, or directly in your web containers
Steps to implement Commanders Act Consent Module with Google Tag Manager.
Commanders Act provides a tag template to manage the "" in Google Tag Manager. This seamless integration takes advantage of our Commanders Act OnSite API.
Please note: Google only requires a validated consent signal only for EEA countries and UK.
Implementing Google Consent Mode in regions beyond may negatively impact campaign performance and is not recommended.
Summarizing all recommended steps:
Access .
Select your "Web" type container.
Add our tag template from the "".
Configure the related tag and its trigger.
Configure your third-party vendor tags.
Test and deploy your container.
Following the above steps, adding our template "" from the Google "Community Template Gallery", you're presented with the following "Tag Configuration" which is the core area where you can manage your consent needs with GTM:
First, you need to input your consent category identifiers for the following 7 categories: Ad Storage
, Analytics Storage
, Functionality Storage
, Personalization Storage
, Security Storage
, Ad User Data
and Ad Personalization
. You can define/find these identifiers by logging in to our platform and follow the section:
(A)
"Data Governance" → (1)
"Consent Management" → (2)
"Categories".
Your identifiers are shown between round parentheses (see highlighted in green below):
If your CMP loads asynchronously, it might not always run before your GTM container. That’s why you have the option to set a "Wait for update" value in milliseconds to control how long to wait before data is sent. This field is optional and its default value is 0. In case you need to set it, we recommend starting from the base value of 500 milliseconds.
To make sure that the consent is correctly managed by GTM with third-party vendor tags, we strongly recommend to enable reactive events. Turn on the (3)
"Advanced Features", (4)
"Activate Reactive Events" and (5)
"Activate [Storage-Name] Reactive Event" for each [Storage Name] you're using. Finally, enter their (6)
"Event Name". These events will be used in the next section when configuring your third-party vendor tags.
You also have the option to directly inject your CMP script by turning on the (7)
"Advanced Features", (8)
"Inject CMP Script" and input your (9)
"URL".
Disabling the default consent may come handy when you don't want to use the Consent Mode.
This is done by turning on the (10)
"Advanced Features" and (11)
"Disable Default Consent".
As the last step, you need to select the "Consent Initialization - All Pages" trigger in the "Triggering" lower area:
Simply add your host URL in the tab "Injects scripts" (see block "allowed patterns").
While Google native product tags, such as "Google Analytics" or "Google Ads" ones, work out of the box, third-party vendor tags require additional settings to properly operate with the user consent. First, open your tag configuration and check under the (12)
"Advanced Settings" and (13)
"Consent Settings" if a consent type (E.g. "ad_storage") is already preconfigured, if not you need to add it by selecting the option (14)
"Require additional consent for tag to fire" and (15)
input the consent type(s) you want to include.
In the trigger group add (16)
any preexisting triggers and (17)
a trigger named as your configured reactive event.
The latter has to be configured as a (18)
"Custom Event" with the same (19)
"Event Name" you used in the previous section and it has to fire on (20)
"All Custom Events".
"Consent Cact - Start" tag refers to the "Consent Banner - URL" variable, and is the tag that "activates" the privacy module* and is the only tag that will be triggered with a simple All pages trigger. All other tags must have a trigger that includes the user's consent. *if you need more information about setup of your Consent banner, you can read our documentation)
"Consent banner - URL": to be personalized with the your Consent banners url.
To obtain your privacy banner url, go on the page Sources > Privacy banners > Deploy
You can also have a look on for more information
You have to first deploy a banner to the Commanders Act CDN or on premise location before being able to configure constraints (see ).
You have to first deploy a banner to the Commanders Act CDN or on premise location before boing able to link it (see ).
You can find the full list of commands in the .
If you have sub-categories with the same scope of the five defined by Google, you need to use their ids instead of the main category ones. You can also rename your categories or change their ids by checking the subsection "".
You also need to set the default status, for each of the 7 categories, before users interact with your and taking into account region-specific behavior. This is done by clicking the "Add Row" button and selecting either "Denied" or "Granted" to match with your input regions and/or sub-regions.
Ensure that your default command accounts for regional variations in your consent strategy. For more information on customizing the default command, you can see Google’s documentation .
If your banner is hosted on your servers (on premise) or if you use our , then you need to update the Permissions of the template.
Then, you need to configure its triggers and this is where we're going to use our reactive events we prepared in the previous section. Locate the "Triggering" area in your tag configuration and add a "".
This completes your configuration. You can now start the testing phase, leading to the final deployment in production. Learn more on how you can configure and run tests with your tags in GTM by checking the section "" in the "". You can also read the page provided by Google for Developers
Look our page for debbuging hints!
Trigger name
Cact consent given Statistical
Trigger Type
CUSTOM_EVENT
Event name
Cact allows Statistical
This trigger fires on
When the user interact with the consent banner and on each page view
Please refer to the subpages for implementation on mobile apps
Having the user consent is essential to send sensible information like the IDFA/AAID. To prevent having to manually save the consent asked to the user and manually using it with our SDKs, we created a module helping you do it automatically.
This module will gather the consent and will:
Display a consent page (if needed)
Save consent and reload it every time the application is launched.
Save and check the validity of the consent. The validity duration is set to 13 months.
Send a hit to our servers to record the consent.
Enable or disable the SDK. (if used alongside the SDK ServerSide)
Add the categories automatically to the hits the SDK sends. (if used alongside the SDK ServerSide)
Privacy's Implementation Guide:
https://github.com/CommandersAct/iOSV5/tree/master/TCConsent
Steps to implement Consent Module with Adobe Launch.
Commanders Act provides a plug-in to integrate with Adobe Launch. The setup requires technical installation steps.
Following you will find the required steps to implement a standard Commanders Act Consent setup.
Choose the default account configuration mode for your account (see Settings).
Setup your Commanders Act Consent categories & vendors (see Manage Categories).
Create one or multiple banner templates (see Manage Banner).
Deploy your Consent banner templates to the Commanders Act CDN or on premise target (see Deploy Banner).
Implement Commanders Act Consent JavaScript tag (see below)
Manage Adobe Launch tags with Commanders Act Consent (see below).
Delay your Adobe container. Commanders Act creates the consent variables when the privacy javascript file is loaded. You have to delay your Adobe container until Consent is ready otherwise the variables containing the consent status will be undefined.
To delay your container, update your <script>
tags loading your Adobe container in order to execute it after Commanders Act Consent JavaScript tag is loaded.
is replaced by:
The text/javascript script type has to be replaced by text/tc_privacy. In this way, Adobe is loaded only when Commanders Act Consent is ready.
Add the Consent javascript file (if possible, call it before Adobe container and after datalayer):
When Commanders Act Consent is loaded and gets the consent, a variable tcCategoriesConsent is created by Commanders Act Consent in the Adobe datalayer:
This variable contains the ID of the categories accepted by the user and separated by a coma.
You have to declare this variable in Adobe Launch interface, in the Data Elements configuration. From a Property page, open the Data Elements tab, then click Add Data Element, and add "tcCategoriesConsent" variable.
If your datalayer is not set in the digitalData object, set the path to tcCategoriesConsent (in this case the variable is created in the window scope: window.tcCategoriesConsent)
Then, you have to create the rules that will fire your tags based on the categories ID accepted by the users. You have to create a separate rule for each category you want to use as a firing condition (ex: "Retargeting category accepted", "Analytics category accepted"...).
In the Adobe Launch interface, open the "Rules" tab and click Create New Rule.
Set a rule based on the previously created tcCategoriesConsent. Ex: if you want to trigger a tag based on the Retargeting category (ID 6), you will have to create a rule "if tcCategoriesConsent contains 6", then the Criteo tag has to be triggered.
Steps to hard code Commanders Act Consent on websites.
Commanders Act Consent can be directly integrated with websites. The setup requires technical installation steps.
Following you will find the required steps to implement a standard Commanders Act Consent setup.
Choose the default account configuration mode for your account (see Settings).
Setup your Commanders Act Consent categories & vendors (see Manage Categories).
Create one or multiple banner templates (see Manage Banner)
Deploy your Commanders Act Consent banner templates to the Commanders Act CDN or on premise target (see Deploy Banner).
Install Commanders Act Consent JavaScript tag (see below)
Manage onsite tags with Commanders Act Consent (see below).
To hard code Commanders act Consent on websites you need to add following JavaScript code to your website. This snippet should be added to the <head>
of your website.
{{ privacy_tag_url }}
has to be replaced with your privacy JavaScript tag URL. This URL can be found in the GENERATE & DEPLOY
tab of each privacy banner.
We recommend to use our OnSite API, to trigger your tags only if user has accepted the related category. If you are looking for your categories ID's, please refer to the section 'Manage Categories'
If, for some specific reasons, you cannot use our OnSite API, there's an alternative approach.
Commanders Act can manage onsite JavaScript tags by wrapping them in a script tag with a custom MIME type.
This approach only works when you install Commanders Act Consent tag in the <head>
of the document (e.g. not when injecting the Commanders Act Consent tag via Google Tag Manager)!
This Commander Act wrapper does only fire that wrapped JavaScript code in case a visitor provided consent for the specified privacy category ID.
The <script>
has to have type="text/tc_privacy"
.
{{ tag_javascript_code }}
has to be replaced with the JavaScript code of the tag you want to manage with Commanders Act Consent.
{{ category_or_subcategory_id }}
has to be replaced with the category or sub-category of the Commanders Act Consent category that should manage this tag (see Manage Categories). Be careful when you create sub-categories associated to a category: you have to enter the sub-category ID in the attribute, not the category ID, as the user will be able to activate or deactivate only sub-categories and not the main category in the banner:
{{ vendor_id }}
has to be replaced with the vendor ID of the vendor related to the tag (Only available when native vendors are activated for the account).
Following examples shows how you would manage a Criteo Tag based on a Consent category named "retargetting".
"Retargetting" was assigned to sub-category ID 6. In case a sub-category is used you should never use the main category (2 in this case) to manage tags.
The Tag wrapper for the Criteo JavaScript tag might look like this (example shortened):
Google Consent Mode will evolve in March 2024!
As Google strongly recommends the use of Consent Mode on their tags, Commanders Act has developed a new built-in feature for clients who wish to implement it.
Just use our new native feature for a super smooth implementation! Please read the following documentation to learn more about this new feature, and how to use it. If you have already implemented Consent Mode v1 using our tag template and would like to keep it, you can update it on v2. Please see the following section for instructions: Migration Guide Consent Mode v1 tag template to v2
Please note: Google only requires a validated consent signal only for EEA countries and UK.
Implementing Google Consent Mode in regions beyond may negatively impact campaign performance and is not recommended.
Google Consent Mode provides 2 approaches: Basic & Advanced In both cases, you will have to activate the feature Google Consent Mode on your account. The only difference will be the following: Basic Mode: Google tags aren't triggered before consent & remains submitted to Commanders Act Consent Rules, there will be no tags firing in case of Optout Advanced Mode: Google tags are triggered before consent & the collected data will depend on the Consent Mode Signal. Tags remains fired even when user has Optout.
Just follow these 6 steps:
Login on your workspace
Go on page Data Governance > Consent Management > Settings
Turn On the option Google Consent Mode. The sub-menu "Google Consent Mode settings" will appears
Select your appropriate Privacy category from the drop-down list for each Google's category.
The Default Status will determine the behaviour of your tags BEFORE consent. If set on "denied": Google will collect minimum information (as if the user has Optout) If set on "granted": Google will collect all information (as if the user has Optin) *You should ask to your DPO before to set a "granted" default status for any of theses categories
In all cases: once the user has given his consent (optin or optout), the default status will no longer apply. The user's choice will determine the status after consent.
If you do not set a category, the status will always be "denied". The "Default Status" dropdown menu will no longer be displayed. Example below for "security_storage" with no privacy category assigned:
enable_tcf_support
If you use TCF 2.2 CMP template: TCData update (TCData.enableAdvertiserConsentMode
) allows Google to infer ad_storage, ad_personalization, and ad_user_data settings from the TC string. This will incorporate consent mode v2 updates directly into the TC string.
Enable the feature tcf_support to let your IAB TCF privacy banner manage the advertising categories.
*Google recommends to activate this feature if your website use an IAB TCF banner template
Don't forget to add your Google associated Vendors (see dedicated documentation for more details)
wait_for_update Enabling this optional feature will send a signal to Google's tags to wait for an update. Enter a value in milliseconds to control the waiting time before the data is sent. This can be useful if you are experiencing timing issues. Otherwise, you can leave it blank!
ads_data_redaction set ads_data_redaction to ON to further redact your advertising data when "ad_storage" is "denied"
url_passthrough URL passthrough option can be used to send event and session-based analytics (including conversions) without cookies across pages.
Sources > Privacy Banners > Select your banner(s)
Go at the edition step of your privacy banner, open the settings menu to turn ON Google Consent Mode Signal
The privacy setup is done! You can now Generate and Deploy your Privacy Banner. *At this point, Consent Mode will not affect the behaviour of your tags. Please follow the next steps!
The activation of this option will automatically add an Google Policy URL, it's a legal requirement for using Google Consent Mode on your website. Feel free to adapt your introduction text if needed
To setup the version "Advanced" of the Consent Mode, remove Commanders Act Privacy rules from all the Google tags, now it's managed by Google Consent Mode
Data Governance > Consent Management > Categories
see tab assign tags
- Remove the privacy constraints from Google tags
- Save
For Basic Consent Mode, skip the step 4! Keep your Privacy rules applied on your tags
Go on Sources > WebContainers > generation step
For a single container setup, generate your container with privacy banner(s) included
For a multiple container setup, generate all your containers. The privacy banner(s) must be linked to the first loaded container to ensure that the Consent Mode signal is always sent correctly.
If you was using the Consent Mode v1 tag, don't forget to delete or deactivate it! It's useless now.
What about the triggers ?
The consent mode is compatible with the container loaded trigger. If your Google tags are already set to this, it will work without any trigger modification
But we also provide a custom trigger, if needed! When a Consent Mode signal is sent, our product pushes tC.event.consent_signal_ready You can use it to trigger your tags.
If your site is an SPA, you can keep your tC.event.page/pageview... as trigger for your Google tags. The same goes for your click/scroll tags.
We recommend to test you setup on a UAT environment if possible.
There's 3 different ways to verify your Consent Mode setup:
The easiest way to verify your setup is using the Tag Assistant plugin provided by Google. The "Consent" event should always be sent before any hits from the tags The status "On-page Default" should be the same then the ones you setup at the step 2
After Consent, the "On-page Update" status should correspond to the consent given on the privacy banner
Feel as a developer? You can also look into the console to verify the Google arguments pushed in dataLayer Google.
Type dataLayer
then press Enter
One last method to verify your setup is possible: check into the payload of your hits in the network. The consent status is fed by the "gcd" parameter
gcd
is included in all hits to Google services, even if Consent Mode isn’t active.
It encodes values for four consent signals (ad_storage
, analytics_storage
, ad_user_data
, and ad_personalization
), and it includes information how the consent signal was generated.
The format of the string is this:
&gcd=11<ad_storage>1<analytics_storage>1<ad_user_data>1<ad_personalization>5
The string starts with 11
, uses 1
to separate the different consent signals, and ends with a number like 5
(or sometimes something else) to mark the end.
l
The lowercase L means that the signal has not been set with Consent Mode
11l1p1l1l5
only analytics_storage has been denied by default
p
denied by default (no update)
11p1p1p1p5
all consent states are denied by default
q
denied both by default and after update
11p1q1p1p5
the user updated their consent choice to set analytics_storage to denied after it was already set to denied by default
t
granted by default (no update)
11t1t1t1t5
all consent states are granted by default
r
denied by default and granted after update.
11r1r1r1r5
the user grants consent to all services after they were first denied by default
m
denied after update (no default)
11p1m1p1p5
all other states were denied by default, but analytics_storage was only set after the user denied it
n
granted after update (no default)
11n1n1n1n5
the site did not set a default consent state and instead set all states to granted after the user chose so
u
granted by default and denied after update.
11u1u1u1u5
the user withdrew all consents after they were set to granted by default
v
granted both by default and after update.
11v1v1v1v5
all states were granted by default and by user confirmation
To help you ensure that the consent signal is sent before your Google tags, we offer a method to get logs in the browser console
tC.privacy.explainGCMSequencingValidation()
If the Consent is set before any Google tags triggered, you will obtain the log
'valid sequencing'
If Google tags are triggered before the Consent is set, then your implementation is incorrect. The log will returns the value
'Consent is set too late, Google tags are triggered before consent set. Please verify your Consent Mode sequencing'
Need a boolean value for specific use cases ?
Use tC.privacy.validateGCMSequencing()
Will simply return true
if your sequencing is correct, otherwise the result will be false
If Google tags haven't been fired yet, the result will always be "false". To get a "valid sequencing" result, Google tags must have been fired at least once.
In case of setup modification, such as activation/deactivation of a parameter, mapping changes on categories, etc.... Web Containers & Privacy banners must be regenerated & deployed.
Google Consent Mode allows the consent management only for the declared Region(s) Our native feature does not include this parameter, for web performance reasons. If you need to use this parameter, we recommend using our TMS Tag template. Please refer to the next section of documentation for configuration details.
Still facing trouble shooting on your implementation, and looking for help ? Contact our technical support team ! As a Google CMP partner with a Gold status, we provide a dedicated email support : cact_support_cmp_google@commandersact.com They will ever gave you a personalized reply to your questions!
For customers who has already implemented the Consent Mode v1: You can activate the built in feature as described above (don't forget to deactivate your actual consent mode tag) However, if you really want to keep your actual setup and simply update your tag, then you can refer to this documentation!
Summarizing all recommended steps:
Access your Commanders Act account.
Update your tag template.
Test and deploy your container(s).
Go on page "Sources" > "Web containers"
Select you "Google Consent Mode with Trust" tag.
Update the js code block of your tag with the following code, then save to obtain the new fields
You can do your mapping on the new fields & Save again your tag
Set the by default status of the *new categories (denied or granted)
Enter the ID of your privacy categories to link them with the Google's *new categories
If needed, you can find your privacy ID on the page Data Governance > Consent Management > Categories
Don't forget to save your settings
Go on page Source > Privacy Banners > edition step
LEGAL REQUIREMENT
Add the following link to the Google Consent Mode Policy in your Privacy Center or in your Vendors menu
https://policies.google.com/privacy
Don't forget to generate & deploy your privacy banner(s) once you've made this additional setting.
You can now Generate & Deploy your privacy banner(s)
You are up to date, you can test your settings on your website. Don't hesitate to refer at the test step above to get tips & tricks.
Since April 2021, Apple requires that your app provide a transparency popup to ask user permission for tracking, beginning with iOS 14.5 () and the ATT framework.
Before attempting to use the IDFA from an iOS device, you must first display the ATT tracking permission alert, according to Apple's guidelines. If permission is not requested or if the user declines, the IDFA will be unavailable to your app and any embedded third-party SDKs. Third-party SDKs may not function properly in this case.To really complies with both Apple and GDPR requirements, you must open the ATT popup to get user permission as well as open CMP popup to get user consent for GDPR purpose. ATT isn't currently compliant with the IAB TCF or with GDPR prerequisites, so it can't be utilized as the lone consent collection system and should be utilized with the Commanders Act CMP.
From customer's experiences, the most accepted solution by Apple is to :
Open the ATT popin
Depending of user's choice on ATT :
if the user choose to allow the tracking, then open the TrustCommander popin to collect the consent
If the user refuse the tracking in the ATT popin, the user has to be considered as optout without opening the TrustCommander popin
For some customer's this solution worked also :
Open the Commanders Act Consent popin
Whatever the consent, open the ATT popin just after
This setup offers the advantage of allowing the user to consent certain purposes whatever his choice regarding the popin ATT tracking. Neverthe less this implementation is some time refused by some Apple reviewers
To go further, here a for France customers the position of the competition authority on this subject: https://www.autoritedelaconcurrence.fr/fr/communiques-de-presse/ciblage-publicitairemise-en-place-par-apple-de-la-sollicitation-att-lautorite
Here are the articles in this section:
Having the user consent is essential to send sensible information like the IDFA/AAID. To prevent having to manually save the consent asked to the user and manually using it with our SDKs, we created a module helping you do it automatically.This module will gather the consent and will:
Display a consent page (if needed)
Save consent and reload it every time the application is launched.
Save and check the validity of the consent. The validity duration is set to 13 months.
Send a hit to our servers to record the consent.
Enable or disable the SDK. (if used alongside the SDK)
Add the categories automatically to the hits the SDK sends. (if used alongside the SDK)
Privacy's Implementation Guide:
Data Governance > Consent Management > Categories
In this section you can manage your Commanders Act Consent categories and sub-categories. These categories will be used by your privacy center to provide users with detailed privacy management options.
Each Commanders Act Consent category has following options:
In case you use Consent module with TMS Web Container you can select a default category with a drop down on the top left of the interface. New tags in TMS client-side will automatically receive the default category as their privacy category. The default category has a *
in the category list.
To add a new category press ADD CATEGORY
on the the top right of the interface.
You can edit a Consent category by pressing the pencil
icon to the right of the category.
You can delete Consent categories by pressing the x
icon to the right of the category.
You need to regenerate your consent banners after adjusting pconsent categories. In case you install Consent module with TMS Web Container you will also need to regenerate your Web Container so that your tags have access to the updated categories.
IAB TCF 2.2 purposes, special purposes, features and special features are automatically added to the CATEGORIES
tab depending the vendors you add in the MANAGE VENDORS
tab. You can still add custom categories that you can use side by side with the predefined IAB categories.
The description of IAB TCF 2.2 categories is automatically loaded from the IAB TCF 2.2 framework.
Management of Commanders Act Consent vendors.
Data Governance > Consent Management > Vendors
In this section you can manage your Commanders Act Consent vendors. These vendors will be used by your privacy center to provide users with detailed privacy management options.
To enable native vendors go to Data Governance > Consent Management > Settings
and activate the custom vendors option.
For customers still using the v1.0 privacy center template (deprecated as of 2019) Vendor activation will automatically upgrade your privacy center to version 2.0.
Click ADD VENDOR
to add vendors to your Commanders Act Consent installation. You can select vendors available on Commanders Act TMS (Predefined Vendors
) or add custom vendors (Custom Vendor
) by selecting the respective tab. A Commanders Act vendor is available by default.
Each vendor can be mapped to Consent categories with the respective dropdown. This allows users to provide consent to all vendors of a category at once in the privacy center. A PEN
icon allows to edit information of the vendor that is displayed in the privacy center. Following fields are available per vendor. A TRASH
icon allows to remove the vendor.
It is possible to map vendors to multiple categories for stand-alone installation of Commanders Act Consent. Tags in your Web Container can only be mapped to one category and vendor.
It is necessary to generate and deploy new version of Consent banners to deploy updates in the vendor section.
Commanders Act is compliant with IAB TCF 2.2 (). To enable IAB vendors go to Data Governance > Consent Management > Settings
and activate the IAB option.
Click ADD IAB TCF 2.2 VENDORS
to manage the IAB vendors with your Commanders Act Consent installation. You can either select all vendors or select specific vendors that are relevant for your setup.
The description of IAB TCF 2.2 vendors is automatically loaded from the IAB TCF 2.2 framework.
Commanders Act Consent will automatically configures purposes, special purposes, features and special features in the CATEGORIES
tab depending on the selected vendors.
To enable Google ACM vendors go to Data Governance > Consent Management > Settings
and activate the IAB option and the Google ACM vendors.
Add Google ACM vendor
allows to add Google ACM vendors to add a Google ATP to your Commanders Act Consent installation. Each vendor has to be mapped to a TrustCommander category.
Descriptions for the ATP that are shown in the Consent banner (into the privacy center) are automatically loaded from the Google ACM list.
Google ACM vendor management only works with IAB TCF 2.0 & 2.2 banner templates.
Commanders Act Consent module is compliant with IAB TCF 2.2 (). To enable IAB categories go to Data Governance > Consent Management > Settings
and activate the IAB option.
You can also have a look on
Commanders Act Consent module is compliant with IAB TCF 2.2 () and can use predefined IAB TCF purposes instead of manually configuring categories. Go to Data Governance > Consent Management > Settings
tab to activate IAB TCF 2.2 option for your account.
Google (ACM) allows to manage consent for Google Ad Technology Providers (ATP) (that are not part of the IAB TCF Global Vendors List) alongside IAB TCF vendors.
Option
Description
Name
Name of the category (e.g. "Analytics", "Advertising", etc.). Privacy centers use this name as the default label for this category in case no localisation was provided in the banner editor.
ID
ID of the category. This ID is used in raw data exports and for technical setup of certain functionalities. It is possible to manually provide an ID. In case the field is left empty a category ID will be assigned automatically.
Description
Description of the category. Privacy centers use this description as the default description for this category in case no localisation was provided in the banner editor.
Sub-categories
It is possible to provide sub-categories for each category (e.g. "Universal Analytics", "Matomo", etc. for an "Analytics" category). Each sub-category has a name and an ID. Privacy center use this name as the default label for this sub-category in case no localisation was provided in the banner editor. The ID is used in raw data exports and for technical setup of certain functionalities. It is possible to manually provide an ID. In case the field is left empty a sub-category ID will be assigned automatically.
Option
Description
Name
Name of the vendor. Privacy centers will display this name.
ID
ID of the vendor. This ID is used in raw data exports and for technical setup of certain functionalities. It is possible to manually provide an ID. In case the field is left empty a category ID will be assigned automatically.
Description
Description of the vendor. Privacy centers use this description as the default description for this vendor in case no localisation was provided in the banner editor.
Policy URL
Privacy Policy Link of the vendor. Privacy centers display this URL for each vendor.
Assign Web Container tags to Consent categories.
Data Governance > Consent Management > Categories (tab ASSIGN TAGS)
Commanders Act TMS tags can be assigned to Consent categories & vendors in following locations.
In ASSIGN TAGS
tab of Data Governance > Consent Management > Categories
.
In the EDIT
tab of TMS Commanders Act.
This section is only available in case you use Commanders Act Consent with TMS Commanders Act (Web Container).
Categories & Vendors are managed separately for each web container. You can select a Web Commander container in the left column. Then you can manage following Consent setting per tag on the right side of the interface.
This option enables Commanders Act Consent to block a tag depending on a visitors privacy setting.
It is possible to activate or deactivate this setting for all tags via the all
and none
buttons on top of the column.
You can assign one Consent category to each tag. This allows visitors to block tags by deactivating the related categories in the privacy center.
You can assign one Consent vendor to each tag. This allows visitors to block tags by deactivating the related vendor in the privacy center.
This option allows you to bypass the default behaviour of tags that are managed with Commanders Act Consent. e.g. Consent will blocks tags that are included in the privacy scope until a visitor provides his consent in case the default account configuration is set to Optout. Bypassing this option would allow you to therefore load tags before the visitor provided his privacy settings (e.g. on the first page). In case such tags are included in the privacy scope they can still be deactivated by the user depending on his privacy settings.
It is possible to activate or deactivate this setting for all tags via the all
and none
buttons on top of the column.
Additionally you can also manage these Consent settings for following elements:
Element
Description
COMMANDERS ACT HITS
Commanders Act related hits that are initiated from the container (this includes hits for functionalities like tag deduplication, tag hierarchy, and other). A separate category is available for the cookie sync option. This setting is synced between all client-side TagCommander container.
STATIC AND DYNAMIC JAVASCRIPT CODE
Custom JavaScript that can be implemented in TagCommander container (found in ADVANCED
section of the Edit
tab).
Containers have to be re-generated and deployed to apply these changes.
For convenience it is also possible to directly assign Commanders Act Consent categories & vendors inside the Edit
tab of TMS Commanders Act (Web Containers). Assigning a category & vendor also includes the tag in the privacy scope.
In case a new vendor is added to the account the tag will not be fired when a user provided an optin for the corresponding category. Therefore it is necessary to activate the "Re-activate privacy" option during the generation of a new banner version to re-ask consent. The option "Don't re-ask the consent to trigger this tag" will change this default behaviour so that the vendor will receive an automatic optin based on the corresponding category.
In case you choose to manage tags with IAB 2.2 you do not need to assign IAB compliant tags in the category assignation tab. IAB compliant tags are automatically controlled by the IAB framework.
It is still possible to assign tags to categories to allow Commanders Act Consent to manage them directly with TMS Commanders Act.
Administration > Copy management
Commanders Act copy management allows to copy privacy banner. Privacy banners can be copied within the same account or transferred to another account.
Steps to copy a banner with copy management.
Select Privacy banner(s)
in the Elements to copy
dropdown.
Use the Site containing the privacy banner(s) to copy
dropdown menu to select the site where the privacy banner is located that you want to copy.
Select one or more privacy banner that you would like to copy in the Privacy banner(s) to copy
dropdown menu.
Choose one or multiple target sites where you want to copy the selected privacy banner with the Destination site(s)
dropdown menu.
You can copy your privacy banner to a new template by selecting Yes
in the Copy the privacy content to a new template
option.
After this you will be able to select the new template in the Destination template
dropdown menu.
This will keep the content (text, selected color, etc.) of the banner and change the template.
This option might not work for customized privacy banner templates. Please contact your Commanders Act consultant or support in case you are unsure if your banner was customized before using this option.
Click on blue buttonCOPY
at the top right corner of the interface to copy the banner with the selected options.
A list of available banner templates in Commanders Act Consent
Commanders Act offers multiple banner templates for different kind of privacy workflows.
Template
Description
Header (with Privacy Center)
Floating overlay banner (is layered on top of the website), positioned at the top of the page. This banner includes a text message and customizables buttons. You can add a link to another page (e.g. privacy policy).
This template exists with and without an optional privacy center.
Popin (with Privacy Center)
A floating modal dialogue (pop-up), positioned in the center of the page. This banner includes a text message and customizable buttons. It supports links to another page (e.g. privacy policy).
This template exists with and without an optional privacy center.
Footer (with Privacy Center)
Floating overlay banner, positioned at the bottom of the page. This banner includes a text message and customizable buttons. It supports links to another page (e.g. privacy policy).
A variation of this template exists with extended accessibility support.
Popin with categories
This template directly opens the privacy center that allows visitors to select Commanders Act Consent categories and sub-categories they want to activate/deactivate.
Footer / Popin / Header
Floating information banner, no buttons to refuse or accept. Not compliant for GDPR & CCPA
Footer without button
Floating overlay banner, positioned at the bottom of the page. This banner includes a text message and cross icon to close the banner. It supports links to another page (e.g. privacy policy). Not compliant for GDPR & CCPA
IAB TCF 2.2 Popin
Template available if IAB TCF compliancy option is activated in the Data Governance > Consent Management > Settings
section.
A floating modal dialogue (pop-up), positioned in the centre of the page. This template offers consent controls following the IAB TCF 2.2 standard.
IAB TCF 2.2 Footer
Template available if IAB TCF compliancy option is activated in the Data Governance > Consent Management > Settings
section.
Floating overlay banner, positioned at the bottom of the page. This template offers consent controls following the IABTCF 2.2 standard.
IAB TCF 2.0 Popin (deprecated)
Template available if IAB TCF 2.0 option is activated in the Data Governance > Consent Management > Settings
section.
A floating modal dialogue (pop-up), positioned in the centre of the page. This template offers consent controls following the IAB TCF 2.0 standard.
IAB TCF 2.0 Footer (deprecated)
Template available if IAB TCF compliancy option is activated in the Data Governance > Consent Management > Settings
section.
Floating overlay banner, positioned at the bottom of the page. This template offers consent controls following the IABTCF 2.0 standard.
Footer with privacy center (accessibility)
Floating overlay banner, positioned at the bottom of the page. This banner includes a text message and customizable buttons. It supports links to another page (e.g. privacy policy). Includes standards for WCAG 2.0 for more details, look at
Popin with privacy center (accessibility)
A floating modal dialogue (pop-up), positioned in the center of the page.This banner includes a text message and customizable buttons. It supports links to another page (e.g. privacy policy). Includes standards for WCAG 2.0 for more details, look at
Among the available templates, one is dedicated to accessibility. It ensures compatibility with RGAA and WCAG 2.0 level AA standards.
Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG) is developed through the W3C process in cooperation with individuals and organizations around the world, with a goal of providing a single shared standard for web content accessibility that meets the needs of individuals, organizations, and governments internationally.
More information here : https://www.w3.org/WAI/standards-guidelines/wcag/
When websites and web tools are properly designed and coded, people with disabilities can use them. However, currently many sites and tools are developed with accessibility barriers that make them difficult or impossible for some people to use.
Making the web accessible benefits individuals, businesses, and society. International web standards define what is needed for accessibility.
Web accessibility means that websites, tools, and technologies are designed and developed so that people with disabilities can use them. More specifically, people can:
perceive, understand, navigate, and interact with the Web
contribute to the Web
With this template the main key point is to offer a privacy fully functional for people with disabilities.
The Accessibility template provides an automatic translation of different labels. This translation is based on navigator language. Currently, it supports : Italian, English, German, French and Russian.
Banners
You can either add new translation or override aria labels by using the function tC.privacy.addTranslation()
in the custom JS.
Labels available :
iframeTitle
: Title attribute of the iframe
privacyLabel
: Aria Label of the footer
acceptAria
: Aria Label of the accept button
refuseAria
: Aria Label of the refuse button
showPcAria
: Aria Label of the “Show Privacy Center“ Button
Exemple :
Privacy Center
⚠️ To translate the privacy you must use another function: pc.addTranslation()
Available keys and their values :
Some of the translation accept a label as {label}. The label here is always the label of the category.
The last keys with SrPrefix
/SrSuffix
have empty translation by default. These keys are used for “sr-only” text which are prefixing and suffixing the category name. These text are only readable by a screen reader.
cookieSr
are used when the category isn’t locked
cookieAlwaysOnSr
replaces cookieSr
if the category is blocked to on
Example:
By default, texts provided to screen readers is translated depending on the navigator language. In some case you may want to display a privacy in english for example even if the navigator language is another one. ie : with an ISO language code in the url
You can force the privacy to take a language by using the function setLocale in the Privacy Center > Custom JS field > JS Block Before :
Value can be : fr, it, de, ru or en
Note : this function must be placed after the translation declaration.
The focus trap is an accessibility option designed so that keyboard user have their navigation locked to the banner. Pressing the TAB key would cycle between the different navigation elements of the banner without going on your website. This is an accessibility recommendation when using modal on a webpage.
You can deactivate the focus trap by adding the following JavaScript snippet to the custom JS of the accessibility template banner:
Options to generate and deploy banner.
Sources > Privacy banners ( tab GENERATE & DEPLOY)
To deploy a new or updated banner it is first necessary to generate a new version of the banner. Click GENERATE
to open the modal dialogue.
You will have following option when generating a new container version.
Option
Description
Comment
You can provide a comment to document the changes of the new banner version (e.g. change text of accept button).
Reactivate privacy
In case you check this option all visitors of the website will be re-asked for consent, they will again see the banner when visiting the website the next time.
You can preview and test new banner versions by clicking the TEST
option on the right site of the banner version in the banner version list. This will preview the banner on a demo website.
It is recommended to test new banner on a test environment of the real website before deploying it.
The deployment process of a new banner version varies depending on the selected hosting method of the privacy banner. You can select the hosting method of a banner in the privacy banner settings that can be accessed with the gear
icon on the top left of the interface (beside the privacy banner name).
Commanders Act CDN ensures a reliable and performant hosting of your banner. It allows to deploy banners automatically and in real-time.
Click DEPLOY
to deploy a banner to the Commanders Act CDN.
This option allows to self-host privacy banner. It therefore requires manual effort on each update. For on premise hosting it is necessary to provide the URL of the folder where the on premise banner is hosted. Example:
http(s)://www.mydomain.com/myfolder/
Click DOWNLOAD
to download on the right side of the new banner files and manually update them on your server.
In case both TMS and Consent Commanders Act are used to manage tags it is important to understand what needs to be generated and deployed for different update scenarios. Following table lists the elements that needs a generation and deployment for common scenarios.
Scenario
Affected Web Container
All Web Container
Consent Banner
Global options change (Data Governance > Consent Management > Settings
)
Yes
Yes
Yes
Category or vendor is added, deleted or updated on a used banner
Yes
Yes
Yes
Tag is added to a container (Source > Web Containers
)
Yes
No
No
Tag is assigned to a category or vendor in the used banner (Data Governance > Consent Management > Categories (Tab ASSIGN TAGS)
)
Yes
No
No
Banner text or style change
No
No
Yes
Banner button actions change
No
No
Yes
On your website, don't forget to integrate a button or a link to allow your users to modify their consent choices
Use our Onsite API, command consentCenter.show
Tag mapping: View all your site's tags and their relationships on a map.
Focus by page type: Filter by page type (conversion page, product page, cart, etc.) and optimize the orchestration of your different tags for these pages in particular.
Health > Website Monitoring > Piggybacking
Data Governance > Consent Management > Settings
.
Only administrators can view and change these account configurations.
This setting allows you to handle how tags should be handled in case no consent was yet provided by a user.
Your tags are not loaded when a user visits your site. They will be fired when the user continues browsing, unless they refuse cookies beforehand.
With the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR), this is the default setting you should choose.
Your tags are loaded when a user visits your site. They are only disabled if the user explicitly refuses cookies.
This setting is not compatible with the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR).
By default, accounts are configured in optout mode since it is the most popular and is GDPR compliant.
This option enables the IAB TCF 2.0 framework for your account. This will enable IAB TCF 2.0 banner, categories and vendors.
This option activates vendors. This will enable vendor management options in the Categories & Tags
section and enables a vendor management screen in your privacy centers that allows users to manage consent per vendor (requires re-deployment or banners).
This option allows to select country codes (e.g. fr
for French) that are used to localise the cookie notice of the cookie scanner feature. It is possible to add default country codes by clicking in the white area and selecting a country code from the dropdown. Additionally custom country codes can be added by clicking in the white area and typing the custom country code. The custom country code is saved after pressing Enter
.
It is recommended to use the default country codes listed in the auto-complete dropdown. This allows to localise the cookie notice based on language settings of browsers.
These settings allow you to modify the default name, separator and subdomain of your privacy cookie.
Changing the cookie name, separator or subdomain can have unwanted side-effects depending on your Commanders Act consent setup. Please contact your Commanders Act consultant or support before applying changes.
Options to create and edit banner templates.Sources > Privacy banners
Click ADD PRIVACY BANNER
in the top right of the interface to add a new banner to your account. Each template has following options:
Example: Configuring options of a privacy banner.
You can open and edit the privacy banner settings via the gear
icon on the top left of the interface.
Changing banner templates might not work for customized privacy banner templates. Please contact your Commanders Act consultant or support in case you are unsure if your banner was customized before using this option.
Sources > Privacy banners (tab EDIT BANNER)
All banner templates can be customized with a WYSIWYG editor. Following options are available for all banners (except IAB TCF and Popin with Categories templates).
Options to manage the main text content of your banner.
Content: Text content (supports HTML formatting and links).
Font color: Text color.
Background color: Background color of the content area.
Custom CSS that can be used by advanced users to customise the banner style. This CSS is applied globally to your website, avoid to use global selectors and use the HTML ID attribute of the banner elements instead.
Advanced customization options. Please contact your Commanders Act consultant or support before using these.
Changes have to be saved with the SAVE
button.
Following options are available for the privacy center and "Popin with categories" templates.
Options to manage the header text of your privacy center.
Title: Text content.
Font color: Text color.
Background color: Background color of the header area.
Options to manage the main text content of your banner.
Categories introduction: Introductory text of the category tab (supports HTML formatting and links)
Vendors introduction: Introductory text of the vendor tab (supports HTML formatting and links, only visible in case IAB TCF 2.0 or custom vendors were activated)
Font color: Text color.
Background color: Background color of the content area.
Options to manage the privacy categories of the privacy center. These categories are based on the categories managed in the Categories & Tags
part of the interface.
Order: Drag and Drop sorting of Categories.
edit
icon that allows to overwrite the default name and description of categories and sub-categories that have been provided in the
Categories & Tags
section of the interface for this banner (used for localisation).
Checkbox that allows to hide a category (below edit
icon).
Categories Blocked On: Checkbox that permanently enables a category that can not be deactivated by visitors (e.g. for an "essential cookies" category)
IAB TCF 2.0 option: IAB purposes, special purposes, features and special features are automatically displayed on the basis of selected vendors in Categories & Tags / Manage vendors
section. The categories translation is done automatically depending on the user’s browser language settings. Non-IAB categories will be displayed after the official IAB categories in the banner.
Options to manage and translate descriptions of custom vendors. IAB TCF 2.0 vendor descriptions and translations are managed automatically by the IAB TCF 2.0 framework.
Vendor Description: Description displayed in the vendor tab.
Hide Vendor: Options to hide the vendor from the banner.
Order of vendors can be changed via drag & drop. (IAB TCF 2.0 vendors are always displayed before custom vendors).
Custom CSS that can be used by advanced users to customise the banner style.
Advanced customisation options. Please contact your Commanders Act consultant or support before using these.
Changes have to be saved with the SAVE
button.
Option to manage the publisherCC
field of the IAB TCF API.
Consent banners sets this value to "FR"
by default in the IAB response. The publisher country code field can be customised with following JavaScript snippet (should be implemented in the first container on the website.).
tC.privacy.iabPublisherCC = "<country_code>";
Example to set the publisher country code field to a German country code:
tC.privacy.iabPublisherCC = "DE";
Option to manage the purposeOneTreatment
field of the IAB TCF API.
IAB TCF offers this field to specify how purpose one should be treated in specific scenarios.
true: Purpose 1 not disclosed at all. CMPs use publisherCC to indicate the publisher's country of establishment to help Vendors determine whether the vendor requires Purpose 1 consent.
false: There is no special Purpose 1 treatment status. Purpose 1 was disclosed normally (consent) as expected by TCF Policy
Consent banner sets this value to false
by default in the IAB response. The purpose one treatment field can be customised with following JavaScript snippet (should be implemented in the first container on the website.).
tC.privacy.iabPublisherCC = (true|false);
You can change the vendor button type to neutral if you choose the neutral position as the default status.f
You can't choose a neutral position for IAB categories (purposes) as it's not allowed by the framework policy
You can choose to synchronize vendors status with categories, choosing to do it only for neutral buttons or always. If you use an IAB TCF template, this option will not have any effects on TCF vendors, as the TCF framework doesn't allow this.
Beta
Right now IAB TCF Stacks are in beta in Commanders Act Consent. They are activated with a JavaScript command that needs to be added to the privacy center CUSTOM JS
field JS BLOCK BEFORE
.Example: Activating Auto Stacks
Commanders Act Consent offers two options to activate Stacks:
This option uses an algorithm to automatically find the tightest Stack combination for the configured vendors. This option is the recommended approach.
Purposes may only be included in one Stack. In case of a bad configuration Commanders Act Consent ignores IAB Stack configuration and provides an error in the browser console.
Per default IAB Purpose controls are placed above native category controls. It is possible to display native categories above IAB TCF Purpose controls by adding following JavaScript snippet to the CUSTOM JS
field JS BLOCK BEFORE
of the privacy center.
pc.tc.categoriesSectionTop(true);
The "Other" headline of the native category controls can be translated by adding following configuration snippet to the CUSTOM JS
field JS BLOCK BEFORE
of the privacy center.
pc.addTranslation({en: { others: 'My Headline' }});pc.setLocale('en');
You can export the raw consent data in the Options menu.
You can download consent data once, or schedule a recurrent export, by email or FTP.
The export includes the following fields:
In case vendors are activated for the account, it is possible to include vendor optins in the export by switching the "Include Vendors in Export" toggle. This will increase export size considerably.
IP address is not stored
The option "Consent storage duration in database" allows to set a duration (in month) the consent data is stored in the consent database (which is used to prove consent). Be careful when changing the setting to not lose old consents by accident! You will be shown a prompt after changing the value to confirm the new duration. The maximum storage duration is 13 months. In case you need a longer storage duration, please contact your Commanders Act support or consultant.
The Commanders Act Consent Analysis dashboard provides insights into critical KPIs of your consent management setup.
The dashboard provides KPIs for each individual Commanders Act Consent banner. You can customize the dashboard by adjusting filter settings at the top left of the interface. Commanders Act Consent Analysis provides the following filters:
Configures which privacy banners are displayed in the dashboard table.
Allows to filter dashboard metrics for typical device types. Depending on the browser settings of your website visitors, device recognition might not be 100% accurate.
Allows to filter dashboard metrics for data inside and outside the EU.
Now the top 10 banners that have at least 1,000 views are displayed. To view other banners, use the PRIVACY selection menu
On the top right you will find options to filter data for a specific time range by specifying a start and end date. The dashboard will show metrics including the selected start and end date.
To select only one day, the day has to be clicked twice in the date picker so that both the start and end date are set to the needed day.
It is possible to export CSV reports via the EXPORT option on the top right in the interface. Reports will only include data for the selected timeframe.
Data collection is done in real-time, but metrics calculation is updated overnight, therefore no data is available in the dashboard for the current day (if you need immediate data, you can export the raw consent data via the "Data Governance > Consent Management > Settings" page).
Commanders Act Consent Analysis measures privacy banner interactions to calculate consent KPIs.
All metrics are visitor/ traffic based and not user based. Commanders Act Consent Banner therefore sets a 1st party cookie TCPID on website visitors. It deduplicates certain metrics (e.g. opt-in actions) of a visitor based on this cookie. Commanders Act identifies visitors as new visitors in case they delete this cookie.
To understand dashboard metrics it is important to understand how Commanders Act Consent Analysis measures optin and optout actions.
An optin action occurs when a visitor...
clicks the accept button of the privacy banner.
saves the privacy center with at least one category set to "on".
navigates to a second page (only in case implicit "on navigation" consent was installed).
scrolls on the landing page (only in case implicit "on scroll" consent was installed).
clicks any element on the website (only in case implicit "on click" consent was installed).
An optout action occurs when a visitor...
clicks the reject button of the privacy banner.
saves the privacy center with all categories off.
Following examples outline a hypothetical scenario with only one website visitor to explain the measurement approach:
A new visitor arrives at a website with a Commanders Act Consent banner.
He accepts the privacy banner and immediately navigates to the privacy policy page.
There he re-opens the privacy center and revokes his prior consent.
This would lead to one optin action and one optout action and two banner views. Commanders Act Consent Analysis deduplicates action and therefore only uses the last action of a visitor to calculate the consent KPIs per day. Additionally it deduplicates the banner views per visitor per day therefore only counts one banner view in this scenario. This user journey leads to an optin rate of 0%, a no choice rate of 0%, and optout rate of 100%.
A new visitor arrives at a website with a Commanders Act Consent banner.
He does not interact with the banner and leaves the site immediately.
On the next day he returns to the website.
He accepts the privacy banner and immediately navigates to the privacy policy page.
There he re-opens the privacy center and revokes his prior consent.
On the first day this would lead to no action and one deduplicated banner view. On the second day this leads to one deduplicated optout action (see Example 1) and one deduplicated banner view.
For a selected timeframe that only includes the first day this would result in a no choice rate of 100%. For a selected timeframe that only includes the second day this would result in a optout rate of 100%. For a selected timeframe that includes both days this would result in an optin rate of 0%, a no choice rate of 50%, and an optout rate of 50%.
This measurement approach and the following metrics are based on the standard usage of Commanders Act Consent banners templates. In case of a banner customization or custom workflow, part of the metrics might have a different meaning.
Following you will find detailed descriptions of each metric in the dashboard. When available you can expand the line to get the break down by categories.
Metrics are deduplicated each day. On 23/09/2021 the calculation method has changed to take into account both banner displays and Privacy Center displays (previously, only banner displays were taken into account). When displaying the dashboard after this date, every date range will take into account Privacy Center display.
In an optin configuration (no tracking before a user provides consent), bounce rate tracking is not possible anymore as bouncers usually won't interact with the website and therefore won't provide consent for analytic services. The no choice metric of Commanders Act Consent Analysis can help to get an idea on your bounce rate, but it is not the same metric!
In a default optin configuration, the "no choice" is expected to include:
Normal cases:
Visitors who do not provide an optin and leave the website (bounce)
Visitors who do not provide an optin and continue to browse the website without closing the privacy consent message (possible with header/ footer banner templates, less likely with a popin template that blocks website navigation)
Visitors who do not provide an optin who continue browsing the website after closing the privacy consent message with the closing cross
Special cases:
Visitors that are redirected by an internal redirect of the website (for example due to a language redirect on the landing page)
Mobile visitors who are redirected to the mobile app when arriving on the landing page in a mobile browser
Visits of bots like web crawlers. Common bot traffic is excluded but industry specific crawlers might increase "no choice" percentage
At the time of the first release of Commanders Act Consent Analysis the no choice rate is expected to be close to your bounce rate. The metrics will then start to differ over the following time.
The performance of privacy banner is crucial for the success of any data driven marketing activity. Therefore it is especially important to perform AB tests of your privacy banner to improve the user experience of your website visitors and to improve your consent KPIs. For AB tests it is common to set a goal to minimise the no choice and optout KPIs.
Commanders Act Consent Analysis dashboard makes it very easy to compare metrics of two banners set up for AB test side by side by adding the AB test banners via the PRIVACY filter option.
Please contact your Commanders Act consultant in case you need support in setting up AB tests for your Commanders Act Consent setup.
The cookie scanner module allows Commanders Act users to monitor cookies on their website and to provide users with an automated cookie notice.
Commanders Act offers a cookie scanner that continuously monitors websites for cookies in real time. The scanner has access to a database of common analytics and marketing cookies and can therefore provide ready to use descriptions and information. This cookie information can be used to install a dynamic cookie notice on the website that provides transparent information about the used cookies and their purpose to visitors.
Simply follow these 3 steps to enjoy this feature on your account:
1-Cookie Scanner is an optional module. Only a Commanders Act consultant (or support team) can activate it. So the first step will be to ask to our team to activate the feature on your Commanders Act site.
2-Declare the domains that you need to be scanned with the Cookie Scanner
Data Governance > Consent Management > Settings > Cookie Scanner Domains
3-Regenerate and Deploy your privacy banner(s)
Cookie scanner combines three mechanisms to identify cookies on websites:
Cookie Scanner uses a JavaScript tag that is directly deployed on the website (e.g. with Commanders Act TMS). The JavaScript tag scans cookies of website users in real time. This allows to identify cookies that are set in very specific scenarios e.g. it allows to identify cookies that are only set for a specific geolocation or behind a log-in form.
The tag also monitors the 3rd party domains the website communicates with (e.g. for an Analytics service). This information is used to infer 3rd party cookies via the cookie scanner cookie database.
JavaScript tags have limited access to cookie information—therefore cookie scanner enriches the information identified with the JavaScript tag with information received with the Chrome extension and cookie database.
Commanders Act recommends to install the Chrome extension on multiple team members across different country teams to cover a wide range of use cases.
Some technical systems (like Drupal) create dynamic cookie names. Cookie Scanner therefore groups cookies when 5 or more cookies start with the same 4 characters. (e.g. abcd123, abcd2345, abcd3456, etc.)
Cookie scanner can scan following types of cookies:
Cookie Scanner scans following fields per cookie:
Cookie scanner doesn't store cookie's values
Health > Website Monitoring > Cookie Scanner > EDIT (Tab)
In the edit step of the cookie notice it is possible to investigate, edit and enrich cookie information.
All identified cookies are listed in three groups:
New lists new Cookies that have not yet been manually investigated
Active lists Cookies that should be shown in the cookie notice
Ignored lists (internal) Cookies that should not be shown in the cookie notice
It is possible to edit the information of each cookie by pressing the Pen
icon to the right on the table. This will open a cookie dialogue with following options:
It is possible to add custom cookies by pressing the ADD COOKIE
button on the top right of the interface. This will open a cookie dialogue that has the same fields as the edit cookie information dialogue. Additionally it has a Name
field that allows to set the name of the custom cookie.
New cookies and inactive cookies can be activated via the Checkmark
icon. This adds them to the Active cookies list.
Active cookies and be deactivated by clicking the Stop sign
icon. This adds them to the Inactive cookies list.
Inactive cookies can be deleted with the Trash can
icon. This removes the cookie from the list entirely.
Cookies that should not be shown in the cookie notice should be kept in the inactive list and not deleted. Otherwise they will re-appear as soon as the cookie scanner identifies them again.
Localisation is not available yet.
It is possible to localize cookie information. This allows to translate important information of each cookie for the cookie notice that can be embedded on a website.
To localize cookie information it is first necessary to select supported languages. To select supported languages go to Data Governance > Consent Management > Settings
and select the country codes of the languages the cookie notice should be made available in. It is recommended to select country codes from the dropdown menu, but it is also possible to add custom country codes. Cookie Scanner offers automatic translation of predefined information for common languages (EN, FR, DE, IT).
After selecting the needed country codes the cookie information can be translated in the EDIT
step of the interface. To translate a cookie click the Pen
icon to open the edit modal. There it is possible to select a country code via a dropdown. Then adjust the setting the fields to translate them. You can preview the cookie list in a specific language by using the country code dropdown in the top right of the interface.
Following fields support localisation:
Vendor Label
Category Label
Description
Custom Fields
The cookie list displays optional labels for each cookie in the cookie list to inform about important information and notifications.
For all types of cookies & storage you can visualize the percentage of detection frequency
Health > Website Monitoring > Cookie Scanner > DEPLOY (Tab)
The DEPLOY (Tab)
interface is used to install, create and deploy a cookie notice on a website. It provides a versioned list of cookie notices that were created within the account.
After all cookie information was setup in the EDIT (Tab)
it is possible to install the cookie notice on a website. The cookie notice is available in 3 versions:
Copy/past the js code on your legal page to automatically build the cookies list table.
The HTML table is the recommended way to install a dynamic cookie notice on websites.
For this it is recommended to setup both a JavaScript tag (e.g. tag template 'TRUST | Install Cookie Notice' in TagCommander) and a placeholder <div>
on the website (e.g. in the Content Management System). The placeholder is a slot where the table should be inserted and the tag loads the table and inserts it into the slot.
Both the <div>
and the tag need to be configured with a common id
. e.g. in case the placeholder <div>
has following id: <div id="ca-slot--cookie-notice"></div>
it is necessary to set the parameter #PLACEHOLDER_DIV_ID#
of the tag template TRUST | Install Cookie Notice
to ca-slot--cookie-notice
.
Endpoint of the HTML file:
https://cdn.tagcommander.com/cookie-scanner/<site_id>/v1/cookies-<language_code>.html
site_id: Commanders Act site ID (e.g. 1234
).
language_code: Language of the cookie notice (e.g. fr
, default language is en
).
The HTML table uses semantic and accessible table HTML. This ensures that the table uses the default styling of your website. The style of the table can be directly adjusted with the CSS of the website. In case you need help styling you can reach out to your Commanders Act consultant.
The JSON API provides a method to install a cookie notice for advanced use cases. It provides all cookie information in a structured data format that can be used by technical users to create custom functionalities. The JSON API can e.g. be used to inject a custom cookie notice into a native App.
Endpoint of the json file:
https://cdn.tagcommander.com/cookie-scanner/<site_id>/v1/cookies-<language_code>.json
site_id: Commanders Act site ID (e.g. 1234
).
language_code: Language of the cookie notice (e.g. fr
, default language is en
).
Before it is possible to deploy updates to the cookie notice it is necessary to create a new version. To create a new cookie notice version click the NEW VERSION
button on the top right of the interface. This will take all cookies in the Active list of the EDIT (Tab)
to create the cookie notice. In the new version dialogue it is possible to provide a comment that explains changes in the new version for internal reference.
The Play
button to the right of a cookie notice version can be used to preview a cookie notice. This will not apply any styling of the website so the look will differ compared to the cookie notice on the website.
A Down Arrow
button is available for each cookie notice version. It allows to download the cookie notice in all localisations in HTML
, JSON
, CSV
and XSLX
format. In the XSLX
one tab is included per language. For all other formats a ZIP
will be provided that includes one file per language.
The DEPLOY
button to the right of each cookie notice version can be used to deploy a cookie notice to the website. This allows to deploy new versions, but allows to roll back to older version in case of issues.
Cookie Scanners allows to add custom fields to provide additional details per cookie. These fields can be added inside of the feature settings accessible via the Gear
icon. It is possible to re-arrange the fields by changing their order via drag and drop.
You can filter your cookie's list by host (website), language and storage type (1st party, 3rd party, local storage, session storage)
If you select 3rd party type, you will obtain an additional filter to view cookies from a specific domain:
By default, the rare cookies (scanned on less than 5% of pages) are now excluded from your list. Use the cursor to manage the scanner's tolerance. If it is positioned on 10%, the list will displays only the cookies scanned more often than 9.9%. You can modify this value, it's up to you!
User Rights for Cookie Scanner are not yet available.
Cookie Scanner offers following user rights:
This option enables the (ACM) for Google Ad Technology Providers (ATP) for your account. This will enable Google ACM vendor management in the Categories & Tags
section and extends the IAB TCF API according to the ACM specification.
See dedicated documentation .
"Neutral position": The default status of vendors is "Undecided". When a new visitor accepts consent categories in the privacy center for the first time the vendors activate based on their linked categories (see ).
of the country that determines the legislation of reference. Normally corresponds to the country code of the country in which the publisher's business entity is established.
Commanders Act Consent offers IAB TCF Stacks to reduce the size of the purpose list in the privacy center. IAB TCF Stacks group purposes and special features in a foldable panel and allows visitors to configure consent for all purposes and special feature in a Stack at once. More information on IAB TCF Stacks can be found in the .
This option allows to manually activate IAB TCF Stacks by providing a list of Stack IDs. The Stack IDs can be found in the .
Not all cookies are accessible to JavaScript tags. The has more technical capabilities to scan missing cookie information. To use the Chrome extension it just needs to be installed in an up to date Chrome browser. After that it starts scanning cookies while surfing the website. This provides a powerful mechanism to identify cookies in all areas of the website, no matter they require a log-in.
Field
Description
id_hit
ID of the hit (autoincrement id)
id_tagcommander
ID of the TagCommander container that installed the privacy banner that initiated the consent hit.
id_privacy
ID of the privacy banner that initiated the consent hit.
version
Version of the privacy banner at the time the consent hit was initiated.
cookie
Consent categories that were accepted in the privacy center.
tcpid
cookie ID of the consent (hashed).
date_hit
Timestamp of the consent hit.
privacy_action
Action that initiated the hit.
V: View of the banner
1: Opt-In click
0: Opt-out click
-1: User refused all consent (only on deprecated version 1.0)
type_action
Type of action that generated the hit.
Ex of possible values:
banner : click in the banner
pc : action in the privacy center
device
device type identifier (1=phone, 2=tablet, 3=desktop, 0=other)
Metric
Description
Visitors exposed to CMP
The number of visitors viewing a screen of the CMP for the requested time period. It includes visitors viewing the first layer as well as visitors opening the privacy center.
Give consent
The number of visitors who at least consent to one category. It includes consent collected via the first layer (accept all, reject all buttons) as well as consent collected via the privacy center. In case several consent actions are collected during the same day (consent, no consent), only the last one is taken into account.
Do not give consent
The number of visitors who consent to no category. It includes visitors who explicitly don’t give consent (e.g. click reject all button) and “no choice visitors” with no action recorded. In case several consent actions are collected during the same day (consent, no consent), only the last one is taken into account.
Metric
Description
Banner button
The number of visitors who explicitly consent to all categories by clicking the accept button on the first layer.
Privacy center
The number of visitors who explicitly consent to at least one category by clicking the save button on the privacy center.
Implicit > Continue browsing
The number of visitors who implicitly consent to all categories by navigating to a second page on the website.
Implicit > Page click
The number of visitors who implicitly consent to all categories by clicking any element on the page.
Implicit > Page scroll
The number of visitors who implicitly consent to all categories by scrolling down on the page.
Metric
Description
Visitors making an explicit choice
The number of visitors saving a consent choice. It includes choices made by clicking consent or refuse buttons on the first layer as well as choices saved via the privacy center.
Explicitly consent (at least 1 category)
The number of visitors who at least consent to one category. It includes consent collected via the global layer (accept all, reject all buttons) as well as consent collected via the privacy center.
Explicitly reject
The number of visitors who consent to no category. It only includes visitors who explicitly don’t give consent (e.g. click reject all button). It excludes “no choice visitors” with no action recorded. In case several consent actions are collected during the same day (consent, no consent), only the last one is taken into account.
Metric
Description
Interaction rate
The number of visitors who at least interact with one element of the CMP first layer. It includes clicks on accept button, reject button, configure button (opening the privacy center) and text links.
Metric
Description
Visitors exposed to privacy center categories
The number of visitors viewing the category section of the privacy center for the requested time period.
Visitors exposed to privacy center vendors
The number of visitors viewing the vendor section of the privacy center for the requested time period.
Visitors saving a configuration
The number of visitors clicking the privacy center save button. It includes visitors using the save button as well as the accept all or reject all buttons.
Visitors not saving a configuration
The number of visitors viewing the privacy center and not saving a configuration. It includes visitors using the closing cross to go back to the first layer and visitor leaving the website from the privacy center.
Cookie Type
Description
Scanned with
1st Party Cookie
1st party cookies are cookies that are stored on the domain of the website.
Tag client-side
Chrome Extension
3rd Party Cookie
3rd party cookies are cookies that are stored on a 3rd party domain.
Chrome Extension
Cookie Database
HttpOnly 1st Party Cookie
HttpOnly 1st Party Cookie are server cookies that are stored on the domain of the website and that have a HttpOnly flag.
Tag client-side
Chrome Extension
HttpOnly 3rd Party Cookie
HttpOnly 3rd Party Cookie are server cookies that are stored on a 3rd party domain and that have a HttpOnly flag.
Chrome Extension
Cookie Database
Local Storage
localStorage is a JavaScript accessible browser storage.
Tag client-side
Chrome Extension
Session Storage
sessionStorage is a JavaScript accessible session based browser storage.
Tag client-side
Chrome Extension
Name
Name of cookie e.g. _ga *In case of multiple (more than 3) cookies with common pattern, they re grouped by patterns
Tag client-side
Chrome Extension
Vendor
Name of the vendor that uses the cookie e.g. Google
Cookie Database
Category
Category of the cookie that give a high level information on the purpose of the cookie e.g. Technical Cookie
Cookie Database
Storage Location
Storage location of the cookie (combination of cookie type and storage domain). It has one of the following values:
1st Party Cookie (www.example.de)
3rd Party Cookie (www.example.de)
HttpOnly 1st Party Cookie (www.example.de)
HttpOnly 3rd Party Cookie (www.example.de)
localStorage (www.example.de)
sessionStorage (www.example.de)
The domain in brackets is the domain where the cookie is stored. For 1st party cookies it is the domain or subdomain of the website. For 3rd party cookies it is a 3rd party domain or subdomain that is different from the website.
Tag client-side
Chrome Extension
Storage Duration
Storage duration of the cookie. An algorithm is used to smoothen technical inaccuracies and to optimise readability for users:
For Session Cookies it displays "Session"
Under 1 month it displays in days, e.g. "7 days"
Above 1 month it displays in month, e.g. "13 months"
Above 36 month it displays in years, e.g. "5 years".
Above 100 years it displays “Unlimited”
Local storage always has duration "Unlimited" and session storage always has duration "Session".
Tag client-side
Chrome Extension
Cookie Database
Description
Description for what the cookie is used, e.g. “Base64 UUID used to identify users on this website to optimise usage across sessions. Used on all pages.”
Cookie Database
Website
Domain(s) of the website(s) the cookie is scanned. For 1st party cookies, the full URL of the latest scan is also displayed
Tag client-side
Chrome Extension
Option
Description
Name
The name of the cookie can not be edited.
Vendor
Dropdown menu that allows to map the cookie to a Commanders Act vendor managed under Data Governance > Consent Management > Vendors
.
Vendor Label
Defines the name of the cookie vendor listed on the cookie notice.
Vendor URL
A URL of the vendor that is used in the cookie notice. This allows customers to click the name of the vendor.
Category
Dropdown menu that allows to map the cookie to a Commanders Act category managed under Data Governance > Consent Management > Categories
.
Category Label
Defines the name of the cookie category listed on the cookie notice.
Storage Type
One of the storage types listed under Cookie Fields.
Storage Domain
The domain where the cookie is stored.
Storage Duration
The duration the cookie is valid on users browsers.
Description
A description of the cookie. If possible this field is automatically filled from the cookie database. In case it is overwritten the description is not anymore synced with the cookie database. Clicking the Reset Default
button will re-sync the description with the cookie database descriptions.
Custom Fields
All custom fields created in the cookie scanner options.
Label
Description
Inferred
The cookie was not identified directly, but inferred via the cookie database. It might be a false positive.
Missing
The cookie was not scanned for over one month. It might not be in active use anymore.
Custom
The cookie was manually created.
Set before consent
The cookie is set before a customer provides consent via Commanders Act CMP. This can be intentional for essential cookies.
User Right
Description
View Cookie List
User can see the cookie list.
Manage Cookie List
User can edit the cookie list and create custom cookies.
Generate Cookie Notice
User can view the Deploy Step and generate a cookie notice version.
Deploy Cookie Notice
User can deploy cookie notice versions.
Manage Cookie Scanner Settings
User can adjust cookie scanner settings (e.g. custom fields).
For its own operations, our Consent Module sets 1st party cookies to store the user's consent and to report anonymous consent statistics.
These cookies are necessary for the proper functioning of the collection of consent and the reporting of anonymous statistics. To this regard they are exempt from the obligation of consent.
Consent storage cookies differ depending on the banner template used:
standard templates: TC_PRIVACY & TC_PRIVACY_CENTER
IAB TCF templates (local storage) : TC_PRIVACY_IAB_VENDORLIST & TC_PRIVACY_TCF
A 1st party cookie is set to be able to collect anonymous statistics of consent: TCPID. We have worked together with the CNIL France to design the setting and processing of this cookie to strictly comply with the rules of the RGPD and in particular the rules enacted by the CNIL in 2019.
In order to be exempt from consent in accordance with article 82 of the Data Protection Act, these tracers must:
have a purpose strictly limited to measure the audience of the site or application (performance measurement, detection of navigation problems, optimization of technical performance or its ergonomics, estimation of the power of the necessary servers, analysis of content consulted) for the exclusive account of the publisher
be used to produce anonymous statistical data only
Conversely, to be exempt from consent, these tracers must not:
lead to a cross-checking of the data with other processing or the data to be transmitted to third parties
do not allow the aggregate tracking of the user's navigation across different applications or websites. Any solution using the same identifier across several websites (for example via cookies placed on a third-party domain loaded by several websites) to cross, split or measure a unified coverage of a content is excluded.
To put in place solutions that respect people's rights, the CNIL also recommends that:
users are informed of the implementation of these tracers, for example via the privacy policy of the site or the mobile application
the lifespan of the tracers is limited to a period allowing a relevant comparison of audiences over time, as is the case with a period of 13 months, and that it is not automatically extended on new visits
the information collected through these tracers is kept for a maximum period of 25 months
the above-mentioned retention periods are subject to periodic review in order to be limited to what is strictly necessary
for FR market : link the Consent Statistics to a category of cookies which can be turn off by the users on 'refuse all'
for FR market : if you decide to do not link the Consent Statistics to a cookies category, you will be must to provide to your users another way to be Optout of Consent Statistics. We provide an FR implementation guide for Optout statistics, as recommended for CNIL compliance
A subcontractor can provide a benchmark service to multiple publishers if:
the data is collected, processed and stored independently for each publisher
tracers are completely independent from each other
Description of the Consent Object format that is used by the onsite API to receive and update consent.
The Consent Object is a standardized way to represent consent throughout all methods of the onsite JavaScript API (similar to the IAB TCF consent string). The object holds a meta
property that includes metadata like the validity of the cookie and a consent
property that holds that current consent settings stored on the browser.The onsite API and Consent Object is the official way to access the consent settings of Commanders Act CMP with JavaScript. The direct usage of the Consent Cookie is deprecated.
The meta
property includes metadata and context for the consent that was provided on a browser.
Property
Description
Type
meta.version
Version of the Consent Object.
String
meta.tcfPolicyVersion
Version of the IAB TCF consent.
String
meta.siteId
Commanders Act site id associated to the consent.
String
meta.bannerId
Banner id associated to the consent.
String
meta.bannerVersion
Banner version associated to the consent.
String
meta.consentId
Id of the consent stored in the TCPID
cookie.
String
meta.dateCreated
Timestamp when the consent was provided (UNIX Epoch in Milliseconds).
Number
meta.dateUpdated
Timestamp when the consent was updated the last time (UNIX Epoch in Milliseconds).
Number
meta.dateExpires
Timestamp when the consent will expire (UNIX Epoch in Milliseconds).
Number
The consent property includes detailed information about the consent provided on the browser.
Property
Description
consent.status
Global status of the consent that can have one of the following values: all-on: All consent categories have been accepted.all-off: All consent categories have been refused (except blocked on).mixed: Some consent categories have been refused.unset: No consent has been provided yet.
consent.categories[category_id].status
Status of an individual category:on: Consent was provided.off: Consent was rejected.unset: No consent has been provided yet (In case neutral button position is configured it will switch to neutral button position for this category).category_id
is the category id configured under Data Governance > Consent Management > Settings > Categories
.
consent.categories[category_id].required
The property was set to blocked on and the status is always on.
consent.vendors[vendor_id].status
Status of an individual vendor:on: Consent was provided.off: Consent was rejected.unset: No consent has been provided yet (In case neutral button position is configured it will switch to neutral button position for this vendor).vendor_id
is the vendor id configured under Data Governance > Consent Management > Settings > Vendors
.
Category and Vendor IDs are prefixed with an identifier in case they are managed by a consent framework.
Framework
Prefix
tcf2_
IAB TCF 2 framework. Special features are additionally prefixed with sf_
acm_
Google's Additional Consent Mode vendors.
Format of the Commanders Act Consent cookie.
The Consent Object received via the onsite API is now the official way to access the consent settings of Commanders Act Consent with JavaScript. The direct usage of the consent cookie is deprecated.
Commanders Act Consent stores the consent of website visitors in a 1st party cookie.
This article only explains the consent cookie. Here you can find a list of all Commanders Act Consent cookies.
The default name of the consent cookie is TC_PRIVACY
. It can be configured in Data Governance > Consent > Settings
.
The cookie is set as a 1st party cookie. The subdomain/domain of the cookie can be configured in Data Governance > Consent > Settings
The value consist of multiple fields separated by @
symbols. The separator can be configured in Data Governance > Consent > Settings
.
The consent cookie format is not 100% guaranteed to stay stable. We try to keep the format as stable as possible and extend it with "append only approach (adding new information with a new @
)", but changes might happen in the unforeseeable future due to limited storage space in cookies.
The cookie value follows following pattern (optional elements are wrapped in []
).
<status>@<privacy_version>[|<tcf_version>]|<banner_id>|<site_id>@<consent_categories>@<blocked_on_categories>@<updated_timestamp>,<creation_timestamp>,<to_expire_timestamp>[@<tcf_vendor_consent_string>]
Field
Description
Example Value
<status>
Status that indicates if a visitor provided his optin or optout.
1
: Visitor is optout
0
: Visitor is optin
<privacy_version>
Version of the privacy banner the visitor interacted with.
008
<tcf_version>
Version of the IAB TCF framework. Only available in case IAB is activated for the account and an IAB banner is used to manage consent. It follows this format:<tcf_global_vendor_list_specification_version>|<tcf_policy_version>|<tcf_global_vendor_list_version>
2|2|42
<banner_id>
ID of the privacy banner the visitor interacted with.
12
<site_id>
ID of the site in the Commanders Act Platform.
34
<consent_categories>
Comma-separated-list of optin, or optout categories. Meaning depends on <status>
field. E.g. when <status>
is 0
then the visitor provides consent for the listed categories. The value is URL encoded. Therefore the comma separator is replaced with %2C
. Some old banner versions might have the value ALL
in case all categories are opted out.
2%2C12%2C13
<blocked_on_categories>
Comma-separated-list of blocked on categories. The value is URL encoded. Therefore the comma separator is replaced with %2C
. These categories are not repeated in the <consent_categories>
field.
2%2C12
<updated_timestamp>
UNIX timestamp for when the consent was last updated
<creation_timestamp>
UNIX timestamp in milliseconds when the consent was provided.
1592900933049
<to_expire_timestamp>
UNIX timestamp for when the consent will expire
<tcf_vendor_consent_string>
Vendor consent information (e.g. for IAB TCF vendors). Only available when vendors are activated for the account and in case vendors are used in the banner. The value is compressed and encoded to keep the cookie size small.
AAAAAjkb23...
0@002|12|3441@1%2C3@4@1592900933049@1592900933049
Field
Description
0
Visitor is optin.
002
Visitor provided optin on banner version 002.
12
Banner ID is 12.
3441
Site ID is 3441.
1%2C3
Visitor provided optin for categories 1 and 3.
4
The category 4 is blocked on.
1592900933049
Visitor provided optin on Tue Jun 23 2020 08:28:53.
1@012|26|4221@@4@1592900933049@1592900933049
Field
Description
1
Visitor is optout
012
Visitor provided optin on banner version 012.
26
Banner ID is 26.
4221
Site ID is 4221.
Visitor provided optout to all categories.
4
The category 4 is blocked on.
1592900933049
Visitor provided optout on Tue Jun 23 2020 08:28:53.
Good to know: special characters such as "@" or "|" are encoded in the cookie value %2C = "," %7C = "|" %40 = "@"
TagFirewall can whitelist or blacklist tags.
TagFirewall is a paid extension that can be installed with Commanders Act TMS or run in standalone mode. Please contact a Commanders Act consultant or account manager to activate it.
TagFirewall blocks unauthorized tags (domains) in real time. This can e.g. help to block and reduce the risk of piggybacking tags. TagFirewall is highly dynamic and can therefore enrich an existing Content Security Policy (CSP) setup to resolve critical issues with tags in minutes or replace the need for a Content Security Policy (CSP) entirely. TagFirewall offers two modes:
This mode blocks tag communication with a configurable list of domains. Communication with all other domains is still permitted.
This mode blocks tag communication with all domains except a configured whitelist.
TagFirewall can be set up and configured with the tag template "Commanders Act - TagFirewall" in Commanders Act TMS tag library.
Option
Description
Mode
Allows to select Blacklist or Whitelist mode.
Blacklist domains
Domains that should be blacklisted. Enclosed in "
and and separated by,
. (Only for Blacklist Mode)
Internal domains
Tag domains that should be whitelisted. Enclosed in "
and and separated by,
. (Only for Whitelist Mode)
Tag domains
Internal domains (domain the website needs to function) that should be whitelisted. Enclosed in "
and and separated by,
. (Only for Whitelist Mode)
Check SSL
This option allows to block all http
script hits (it will only allows https
script hits).
TagFirewall can be set up and configured with a custom JavaScript tag for all other installations. The tag has following options.
Option
Description
<whitelist_tags>
Array of domains used by tags that should not be blocked. (Only for Whitelist Mode)
<whitelist_internal>
Array of internal domains (domain the website needs to function) that should not be blocked. (Only for Whitelist Mode)
<blacklist_tags>
Array of domains used by tags that should be blacklisted. (Only for Blacklist Mode)
<active_flag>
This option activates TagFirewall. Set to true
to activate TagFirewall.
<check_ssl>
This option allows to block all http
script hits (it will only allows https
script hits). Set to true
to activate it.
<script_url>
URL of the TagFirewall library JavaScript file. This URL will be provided by a Commanders Act Consultant or Account Manager.
The tag should be included in the <head>
of your document. It can only block tags that are loaded after the TagFirewall tag and JavaScript library file.
Field
Description
Name
Label of the banner used in the interface.
Template
Dropdown to select a template for this banner.
Hosting
Hosting method used for this banner (see Deploy Banner).
Consent duration
Duration how long the consent cookie is valid. After this duration the consent cookie is not valid anymore and a new banner will be presented to the user. It is possible to configure a duration in full months between 1 and 13 month. This has no impact on the storage duration of the consent in the Commanders Act Consent database.
Use the new privacy center
This option allows to use the old privacy center template of Commanders Act Consent Banners. This option allows to use custom CSS and custom JS that was created for old banner templates. In case you are not sure if a banner was customized please check with your Commanders Act consultant or support contact before creating a new template. This option is not available on all templates.
Please download our implementation guide for Commanders Act Consent exempted statistics for CNIL compliance of France market
Marketing Preferences Center is part of our Consent management Premium offer. It allows you to build a personalized Preferences Center where online and offline consents are merged around unified users and stored in the same database.
Then, you can easily create and customize a web page to display this information to visitors who want to manage their consents and personal information.
It turns a legal page into a preference center that is way more valuable for a customer as it is more like a sharing space between the brand and their visitors/clients rather than just a way to collect the consent.
Marketing Preferences Center is a realtime searchable nosql database. We provide also a dedicated API to read and/or write preferences/consents on this database
· Consents are collected through our CMP solution (native integration)
· Preferences coming from a CRM database could be added with the FTP importer files or API
· Our customers can personalize the look and feel of their marketing preferences center page, we don’t host the webpage.
· Paid option: our customers can choose to receive regularly a full consents database copy to have a backup on their side
The API accepts a maximum of 20 preferences
Step by step guide to remains compliant on the Web for TCF v2.2
Here's the 5 steps to follow to remains compliant with the TCF on your website
Verify/Update your IAB Vendors
The Vendors List has evolved, we recommend to verify your IAB Vendors selected.
Data Governance > Consent Management > Vendors
Setup an Accept All/Refuse all buttons in your privacy center
Sources > Privacy Banners > Edit (select your banner) > Privacy Center tab > Buttons
*don't forget to save your changes !
Generate a new version of your Consent banner
Sources > Privacy Banners > Edit (select your banner) > Generate
*We recommend to check the option 'reactivate the privacy', so all you users will have the new consent string format, including the new purpose and the updated vendors
Generate a new version of the Web Container related to you Consent Banner
Sources > Web Containers > Edit (select your container) > Generate
Deploy your latest versions of Web Container and Consent Banner
The deadline to migrate is November 20, 2023
Google is a TCF 2.0 member, and Google Ad Manager (GAM), Adsense, and Admob can use the IAB TCF API to get the user consent status (the TC string) from Commanders Act CMP.
To enable Google ACM vendors go to Data Governance > Consent Management > Settings
and follow
GAM's recorded errors GAM displays an error message in your GAM Console if it is unable to collect a TC string from the CMP:
The specific errors found are detailed in a report, which you can compare to the GAM documentation in the Troubleshooting TCF 2 implementation post.
We've mentioned some of the most common error codes we've seen while integrating with GAM below.
1.x (1.1 or 1.2 or 1.3) : Google is not approved as a vendor regarding consent or legitimate interest. 1.x errors are to be anticipated, it's normal to expect a certain amount of these errors as they mean that the user has refused permission for Google, main Google purposes, or that you have publisher restrictions that prohibit Google from running.
The rate of negative consent for a given website or mobile app should be approximately matched by the 1.x errors.
Checklist for determining why 1.x errors are so common:
Verify that your 1.x errors as a percentage of all ad requests are approximately equal to your negative consent rate (within a 5 points margin). For instance, if Commanders Act Consent Analysis reports a 90% consent rate per page view, a typical 1.x error rate is beetween 5% to15%.
Examine whether the IAB TCF 2 was implemented on your website or mobile app prior to September 2020.
Check to see if there are publisher restrictions. If so, make sure they don't affect Google or do so in a way that's compliant with Google's requirements : .
Errors are found in the following ways:
1.1 Errors: Google is not permitted as a vendor along with consent or legitimate interest.
1.2 errors: For EEA countries and the UK, there is no consent for Purpose 1. Before determining whether or not the TC string causes an error, Google will always check whether Purpose 1 has permission before determining whether or not Google, as a vendor, is allowed.
The IAB TCF v2.2 has new requirements. This page listing the new elements of the CMP IAB TCF UI standard.
This is an informative page. Almost every listed points above are automatically managed by our Consent Module (only the buttons "accept all" and "refuse all" are not automatically added). Simply follow our Migration guides and to update you banner with these new requirement
The standard text has evolved with more precise list of usage of datas, and the total number of IAB TCF vendors must be displayed
If your banner has a custom text, you can use this function to display the number of vendors on the first layer
tC.privacy.getNbIabVendors()
The TCF will add a new (special) purpose to the classification of purposes in the TCF, informing their users that they are capturing and sharing data subject choices via the TC String. The name of this new special purpose is "Use limited data to select content" (ID 11)
purpose 3 (create a personalized ads profile)
purpose 4 (select personalized ads)
purpose 5 (create a personalized content profile)
purpose 6 (select a personalized content profile)
3 major changes for the information provided by the Vendors
They can provide a cookie policy url in multiple languages (the displayed url will be the same then the browser language)
They must show the data retention period for each purpose
They must show data they will collect
In February last year, the Belgian Data Protection Authority (APD, “Autorité de Protection des Données”) issued a decision against IAB Europe related to the Transparency and Consent Framework (TCF), fining the organization 250k€ and instructing it to come up with a plan to solve the issues that were identified.
Since then, IAB Europe has come up with a plan to update its TCF, which will come into action over the following months. In this article, we review the context surrounding the APD decision, catching you up on the events from last before presenting IAB Europe’s action plan, and finally going over what these changes will mean in practice for Commanders Act users.
March 2023 update: On March 15th, 2023, IAB Europe confirmed that the Belgian APD has voluntarily suspended the six-month implementation period of IAB Europe’s action plan. As a result, the July 2023 deadline no longer applies. It’s now reported for Q4 2023
For more details and pending additional information, read the official IAB .
More than a year ago, on February 2nd, 2022, the Belgian APD issued a decision against IAB Europe citing 4 issues with its Transparency and Consent Framework (what’s the TCF? Learn more ). According to the Belgian APD:
The Transparency & Consent (TC) string, the consent signal stored by players in the advertising industry, is personal information. As such, participants should establish a legal basis.
IAB Europe is a data controller of that information, whether or not it processes the consent information
IAB Europe is a joint controller with TCF participants (vendors, CMPs, publishers)
Security measures in place to protect the integrity of the consent signal were not sufficient
IAB Europe was subsequently fined and instructed to come up with an action plan to solve these issues. The IAB Europe, along with some TCF participants, has worked on the action plan and submitted it to the APD in April 2022. Despite additional procedural events in September, the action plan was reviewed on January 11th by the Belgian APD.
Of course, we will communicate with Commanders Act customers with specific action points before then.
Here are the main changes and obligations that will impact your Consent Management Platform if you’re using the TCF after April 2023:
New TC string special purpose
Users of the TCF will be required to add a new (special) purpose to the classification of purposes in the TCF, informing their users that they are capturing and sharing data subject choices via the TC String.
No more legitimate interest for targeted advertising
Going forward, users won’t be able to rely on legitimate interest for personalized advertising.
Specifically, the purposes impacted will be purpose 3 (create a personalized ads profile), purpose 4 (select personalized ads), purpose 5 (create a personalized content profile), and purpose 6 (select a personalized content profile).
Mandatory disclosures in the second layer of the CMP
After April, users of the TCF will be required to disclose new information in their CMP second layer:
The legitimate interests at stake
The categories of data collected and/or already held by Vendors
The retention periods (in the Vendors’ description)
Vendor-related changes
Publishers will be presented with a warning about the impact that a large number of vendors can have on the ability of users to make informed choices.
Additionally, the number of vendors will need to be disclosed in the first layer of the CMP. Finally, we will recommend using event listeners to ensure proactive communication of changed TC String to vendors.
As a Commanders Act customer, what do these changes in the TCF mean and what are you supposed to do? Don’t worry, we’ve got it all planned out.
Not a lot will be expected from Commanders Act customers. However, if you decide to continue using the Transparency and Consent Framework, you must know that consent notices/consent banners will be changing slightly (based on the changes listed in the previous section), and you should therefore be ready for it.
The migration from the TFC v2.2 will take place on November 20, 2023 serving as the hard deadline for the change. You will be must to regenerate your consent banners TCF before this deadline.
Once the migration will be complete, we will recommend that you recollect consent from your customers, as previously collected consent was deemed invalid following the Belgian APD decision. Additionally, you’ll most likely have to reduce your vendor list, and updating mobile SDK versions to get the new TCF various updates will be compulsory.
But don’t worry, we will remind you about this before the deadline.
Description of how to interact with IAB consent API
If you are using IAB TCF option (see to setup IAB TCF on your account), you will be able to use IAB TCF's __tcfapi
where your privacy banner is deployed.
That function is defined in your container and in your privacy banner so that you can use it before your privacy banner has finished loading. It is sometimes referred by IAB as the TCF API stub
.
IAB TCF consent is encoded in a format called the Consent-String
.
The recommended way of getting the value of TCF's consent-string (tcData.tcString
in the example below) is by using the addEventListener
command.
Sometimes you do not want to be notified of consent updates. You can achieve this by using the more advanced code below:
This an optional extension to IAB TCF.
Once setup in Consent Management Settings, an additional addtlConsent
property will be available on the tcData
object.
This page is to the attention the customers using the Commanders Act SDK with the IAB Consent Module in their mobile application
Here's the 2 steps to follow to remains compliant with the TCF on your mobile application
Requirements To be allowed to migrate on IAB TCF v2.2, your application must use the v5 of our SDKs If you're still using the v4, please refer to the main
Please note: this documentation is a user friendly step by step guide. For technical details please refer to our GitHub and
Simply download the latest versions of our TCIAB SDK Modules
Upload the latest version to update your offline json's
(required if you're using other languages then EN, this link example is for FR language)
your privacy json file updated (needs to be modified, following the step "Update the content of your privacy json file")
Upload your CDN json file
Your privacy json file updated needs to be uploaded on CDN Commanders Act, please contact your consultant or our support team to upload the latest version of your json on our servers. (the content of this json file needs to be updated, following the next step.)
Update the content of your privacy json file
Verify your vendor list "vendors": "15,48,501,506,520,539,512,895",
*if you left the "vendors" empty, it will be considered as ALL vendors by our SDK
Pay attention to your Vendor List, some Vendors aren't existing anymore in the GVL v3
Add the new required fields
texts -> generic -> "illustationsButton": "illustrations"
texts -> generic -> "dataCategoriesDef" : "Data Categories"
texts -> vendors -> "legIntClaimTitle": "Legal policies"
Full json example:
The value {total_number} in the "purposeTitle" is a dynamic field. The total number of your IAB vendors will be displayed here
The deadline to migrate is November 20, 2023
IAB Europe has released a new CMP Validator Chrome Extension available
IAB TCF requirements are very strict. If you wish to display a custom text, we strongly recommend you to ask a validation from IAB team. You can also refer to this
If you don't have yet an accept all / refuse all buttons in your privacy center, you must add them manually. You can refer to the step n°2 of for setup help
To conclude, and while it’s important to be aware of the upcoming changes following this important industry decision, the impact on Commanders Act customers should be minimal, and we’re hoping to provide thorough assistance to everyone along the way If you wish to go further, you will be able to verify your TCF compliancy, since IAB Europe has released a new CMP Validator Chrome Extension available that includes all requirements of TCF v2.2.
Reference:
You can use this copy-paste a Consent-String
on this page: .
Reference:
Reference:
Overview on the Commanders Act Consent OnSite API.
The Commanders Act Consent API is used to interact with Commanders Act Consent with JavaScript. It currently only offers methods to receive and update consent, but it will be improved with additional methods in the future.
It is necessary to install a JavaScript stub before any of the OnSite API methods can be used. The stub is used to buffer all methods in a JavaScript array until Commanders Act consent banner JavaScript is loaded and ready to process the methods. This allows to use the OnSite API before Commanders Act Consent Banner (JavaScript file) was loaded.
window.caReady
is a JavaScript array that buffers the interactions with the API. window.cact
is a JavaScript function used to interact with the OnSite API.
In case you work in a big team and are unsure the stub was already installed it is ok to install the JavaScript stub multiple times.
After installing the stub it is then possible to use any of the OnSite API methods via the window.cact
function.
The available methods are listed in the documentation under ONSITE API.
Each method follows a strict signature:
Argument
Descriptions
Required
command
A string identifier used to select the desired method.
Required
options
A JavaScript object that includes data passed to the method.
Optional
callback
A JavaScript callback function that is used to receive information or events from the OnSite API.
Optional
Below you will find an example method that is used to receive the Commanders Act consent status with the OnSite API. This example only provides a callback to receive the consent without providing any options.
The OnSite API methods are called asynchronously. In case e.g. you need information synchronous in the <head>
of the document it is recommended to cache and retrieve the result of the API in localStorage
.
Get/put user consent stored in DataCommander
GET
https://api.commander1.com/engage/user/
This endpoint allows you to get categorie's consent for one specific user
token
string
Security token
user_id
string
ID of the user
site
integer
ID of the site
GET
https://api.commander1.com/v1.0/engage/visitors/
This endpoint allows you to get categorie's consent for one specific visitor
callback
string
(optional) Callback for jsonp request
token
string
Security token
site
integer
ID of the site
tc_id
String
Optional. Cookie id of the user
PUT
https://api.commander1.com/engage/user/
Insert or update a preference in the database (require to have the DataCommander module activated)
site
string
Id of the site (account)
user_id
string
Id of the user. Required if tc_id parameter is not set
token
string
Security token
Syntax and limitations
The json playload is represented by a key/value for each preference.
Each preference property (key) start with "preferences." followed by the preference name : preferences.your_preference_name
The preference name should not contain white space, dot or special characters. Its format is [A-Za-z0-9_-]
The preference value can contain white space, dot but not special characters.
The API accepts a maximum of 20 preferences
Example Request
PUT
https://api.commander1.com/engage/user/?site=1234&user_id=1234&token=WvNIX8955cnZ7WF0f632s0Wb99Ql3rtA
Method to receive Commanders Act consent and consent metadata OnSite via JavaScript.
The Commanders Act OnSite API stub has to be installed before using any of the OnSite API functions.
cact('consent.get', function (result) { ... });
The consent.get
method takes one callback JavaScript function as an argument that gets called with the Consent Object that is currently stored on the browser. The callback is called once after Commanders Act CMP JavaScript loaded and validated the stored consent.
The OnSite API works asynchronous. In case you need the consent synchronous (e.g. in the <head>
of a document for AB Testing or personalisation solutions) it is recommended to cache the object in the localStorage
of the browser. In this case it is crucial to implement the consent.onUpdate
method to keep the cached consent in sync.
In this example the Analytics category was configured with the consent category id 2 in Commanders Act banner.
In this example the Analytics category was configured with the consent category id 2 and the vendor Google with vendor id 5 in Commanders Act CMP.
Method to update Commanders Act consent status OnSite via JavaScript.
The Commanders Act OnSite API stub has to be installed before using any of the OnSite API functions.
The consent.update
method allows to update the consent with JavaScript. It has to be called with a Consent Object that includes the updated settings. Commanders Act will deep merge the status fields of the current Consent Object with the provided object and automatically update all meta properties and the consent.status
property automatically. In case a consent.status
field is provided with value all-on, all-off or unset all other updates are ignored and all categories and vendor settings will be set to on, off or unset accordingly.
All not configured categories and vendors are ignored when deep-merging the consent objects.
Below you can see how the Consent Object is affected by this update.
Specifying a category or vendor will not have any effect.
Below you can see how the Consent Object is affected by this update.
Specifying a category or vendor will not have any effect.
Below you can see how the Consent Object is affected by this update. Note: required categories are not affected.
You can specify an action inside the update parameters:
This action value will be used to compute your dashboard metrics.
If it is omitted, the default value is banner_button
.
The allowed values are:
banner_button
pc_save
page_click
scroll
browse
Additionally, the following values are allowed for optout only (status: 'all-off'
):
banner_cross
JavaScript method to display your consent banner.
The command consentBanner.show
allows to redisplay the consent banner for specific reasons. Simply use the following Javascript method:
cact('consentBanner.show')
This command allows you to display the consent banner after the user consent is given
JavaScript method to hide your consent banner.
The command consentBanner.hide
allows to hide the consent banner for specific reasons. Simply use the following Javascript method:
cact('consentBanner.hide')
The California Consumer Privacy Act of 2018 (CCPA) gives consumers more control over the personal information that businesses collect about them and the CCPA regulations provide guidance on how to implement the law. This landmark law secures new privacy rights for California consumers, including:
The right to know about the personal information a business collects about them and how it is used and shared;
The right to delete personal information collected from them (with some exceptions);
The right to opt-out of the sale or sharing of their personal information; and
The right to non-discrimination for exercising their CCPA rights.
In November of 2020, California voters approved Proposition 24, the CPRA, which amended the CCPA and added new additional privacy protections that began on January 1, 2023. As of January 1, 2023, consumers have new rights in addition to those above, such as:
The right to correct inaccurate personal information that a business has about them; and
The right to limit the use and disclosure of sensitive personal information collected about them.
Businesses that are subject to the CCPA have several responsibilities, including responding to consumer requests to exercise these rights and giving consumers certain notices explaining their privacy practices. The CCPA applies to many businesses, including data brokers.
It is required under CPRA to retain a minimum amount of data that is only essential for the organization to fulfill its requirements. In addition, businesses should not keep data for longer than necessary; if they do, a justification must be presented, and they must notify the user. The criteria to Comply with CPRA remained almost the same as in CCPA, but with a slight change:
Businesses should comply if they obtain a revenue of more than $25 million or gain 50% from selling personal data.
Businesses should comply if they process data of more than 100,000 users instead of 50,000.
The California Privacy Protection Agency was created to enforce the CPRA starting July 1, 2023. It is responsible for raising awareness about data privacy and ensuring that consumers’ rights are protected while implementing penalties on non-compliant entities.
For more information, please visit the official CCPA website https://oag.ca.gov/privacy/ccpa
To to be compliant with CCPA, simply follow these steps:
Create a dedicated ccpa banner: use the "footer with privacy center" template
Add your text about cookies: must list the categories of personal information businesses collect about consumers and the purposes for which they use the categories of information. Don't forget to integrate a link for your cookie policy.
Add a button with this exact text : “Do Not Sell My Personal Information” This button should Optout the user (value refuse all) or open a privacy center with one category “Personalized advertisement”. Please note: this category is a requirement (must contains all tags that can sell personal information).
Set your consent duration for at least 12 months
Enable the Global Privacy Control option on your Commanders Act site
Integrate in your website footer a link or a button to manage consent choices
example of html code to integrate:
<a href="#" onclick="tC.privacyCenter.showPrivacyCenter();return false">privacy center</a>
Update your Privacy Policy: Businesses that sell personal information about California residents, or allow information to be collected on their websites or apps, need to provide information in their privacy policies about that collection or sale. The CA Attorney General has provided draft regulations on how and what information should be included in privacy policies, which you can find here.
The Global Privacy Control is an initiative aimed at enabling users to easily exercise their privacy preferences across multiple websites and online services. It is designed to give users more control over how their personal information is collected, used, and shared online.
The GPC operates through a browser signal or an HTTP header that users can activate to indicate their privacy preferences. When a user enables the GPC signal in their browser, it sends a request to websites and online services, indicating that the user wishes to opt out of the sale or sharing of their personal information.
For more information, you can visit their website
Simply follow these 2 easy steps:
1 - Enable on the option Global Privacy Control directly on your CCPA Banner
2- Regenerate and Deploy your Consent Banner
Method to revoke Commanders Act consent OnSite via JavaScript.
The Commanders Act has to be installed before using any of the OnSite API functions.
consent.revoke
is called with no options and no callback function. It resets the consent, consent id and initiates two consen.onUpdate
events, one with the updateEvent
set to changed
, and a second one set torevoked
that allows to perform cleanup tasks like removing cookie identifiers.
Method to obtain Commanders Act consent when it becomes available.
Method to obtain consent when it becomes available.The Commanders Act has to be installed before using any of the OnSite API functions.
The consent.onReady
method allow to subscribe a callback function for when consent is set. The callback function will be called only once, with the updated Consent Object. It is called whenever the consent is set via a consent banner interaction or when a consent cookie is already set.
Like in the command consent.onUpdate
, the consentObject
argument will be enriched with the property updateEvent
, but only with the value 'set
'.
In this example, the code is waiting for the user's interaction with the consent banner. The Analytics category was configured with the consent category id 2 on privacy banner.
Method to subscribe to Commanders Act consent status updates OnSite via JavaScript.
Method to subscribe to Commanders Act consent updates OnSite via JavaScript.The Commanders Act has to be installed before using any of the OnSite API functions.
The consent.onUpdate
method allow to subscribe a callback function for consent updates. The callback function will be called with the updated Consent Object. It is called whenever the consent is changed via a Commanders Act banner interaction or the consent.update
method of the OnSite API.
The consentObject
argument will also be enriched with an additional property updateEvent
to signal how the update happened. It can have following values:
When consent is revoked it fires two events: One changed followed by one revoked.
In this example the Analytics category was configured with the consent category id 2 in Commanders Act Consent settings.
In this example the Analytics category was configured with the consent category id 2 in TrustCommander.
Value
Description
set
The consent was set.
changed
Consent was already established and then changed.
revoked
Consent was revoked by the user. Used for cleanup tasks like deleting cookie identifiers.
JavaScript method to hide your consent center (consent categories menu).
The command consentCenter.hide
allows to hide the consent center for specific reasons. Simply use the following Javascript method:
cact('consentCenter.hide')
Get data from the consent dashboard (aggregated data)
GET
https://api-internal.commander1.com/v2/{siteId}/privacy/statistics
This endpoint allows you to get the data from the consent dashboard on a specific date range
{siteId} (*required)
string
Account ID example: '12345'
filter[sup_filters][location][]
integer
Data inside and outside of the EU 0 : Out of EU 1 : EU
filter[sup_filters][device][]
integer
Typical device types 0 : others 1 : mobile 2 : tablet 3 : desktop
token (*required)
string
Authentication token. Optional if the header "Authorization' parameter is used instead.
filter[begin_date] (*required)
string
example: '2021-04-30'
filter[end_date] (*required)
string
example: '2021-04-31'
For each API, you'll have to ask a token to your account manager or support team.
Device filters
&filter[sup_filters][device][]=2&filter[sup_filters][device][]=3&filter[sup_filters][device][]=0
1 = Mobile
2 = Tablet
3 = Desktop
0 = Others
(in the example above, mobile device is excluded)
Location filters
&filter[sup_filters][location][]=0
1 = EU
0 = Out of EU
(in the example above, EU user's location is excluded)
JavaScript method to display your consent center (consent categories menu).
The command consentCenter.show
allows to redisplay the consent center for specific reasons. Simply use the following Javascript method:
cact('consentCenter.show')
This command allows you to display the consent center after the user consent is given
Publishers using Google AdSense, Ad Manager, or AdMob must use a CMP certified by Google and must integrate the IAB’s TCF
In addition to the Google EU user consent policy, publishers and developers using Google AdSense, Ad Manager, or AdMob will be required to use a Consent Management Platform (CMP) that has been certified by Google and has integrated with the IAB's Transparency and Consent Framework (TCF) when serving ads to users in the European Economic Area or the UK.
Commanders Act CMP provides you all the keys to be compliant with this new requirement. Depending on your configuration, you’ll fit into one of these use cases:
You already have
a TCF privacy banner
with Google Vendors?
You already use an IAB TCF banner template, but you have no Google ACM Vendors?
You don’t
currently use
an IAB TCF banner template
Status: You’re already compliant. Nothing to do
Status: You’re 3 steps away from being compliant. Follow the instructions below
Status: You’re 4 steps away from being compliant. Follow the instructions below
Go on page: “Data Governance > Consent Management > Settings”
Situation #2: Activate the Google ACM option
Situation #3: Activate the IAB TCF Compliancy & the Google ACM options
Go on page: “Data Governance > Consent Management > Vendors”
Situation #2 and #3 : Add your Google ACM Vendors
Go on page: “Data Governance > Consent Management > Settings”
Situation #2: not required if you already have a TCF privacy banner with “Google Advertising Products Vendors”
Situation #3: Activate the IAB TCF Compliancy & the Google ACM options
Go on page: “Sources > Privacy Banners”
Situation #2 and #3: • Select your banner, go on tab Generate & Deploy • Generate your new version of the privacy banner It’s ready to be deployed in production!