Cookie Consent Logic Map & Tech Spec

 

Stop Illegal Tracking. Automate Compliance.

Download the 2026 Cookie Consent Logic Map & Tech Spec.

Technical Specifications for GDPR, CCPA, and GPC Implementation.


Your Cookie Banner is probably fake.
Most websites have a banner that says "We use cookies," but the tracking scripts load anyway. This is called "Fake Consent," and in 2026, regulators in Europe and California are using automated bots to fine companies that do this.

To be compliant, your website must physically block tracking scripts until the user gives granular consent. And it must behave differently for a user in Berlin (Opt-In) vs. a user in San Francisco (Opt-Out).

The Legal Attorney Logic Map is a technical specification document. It is not a contract; it is a blueprint. It tells your engineering team or your Consent Management Platform (CMP) exactly how to behave to satisfy global privacy laws without breaking your website's functionality.


Why this is the "2026 Edition":

  1. Global Privacy Control (GPC) Ready
    New laws in California and Colorado require you to honor the "GPC" browser signal. If a user visits your site with this signal turned on, you must automatically opt them out of tracking. Our Logic Map includes the specific conditional logic to handle this signal correctly, preventing automatic fines.

  2. Geo-Fencing Architecture
    You do not want to show a strict, conversion-killing GDPR banner to a user in Texas. Our map defines 4 Zones of compliance, allowing you to show the minimum required friction to each user based on their IP address.

  3. Google Consent Mode v2 Integration
    Google now requires websites to send "Consent Signals" before it will track conversion data. Without this, your ad ROI tracking breaks. Our document includes the specific implementation commands to keep your data flowing legally.


What You Get Inside the Kit:

I. The Master Technical Specification (Word)
A comprehensive technical blueprint for developers.

  1. Categorization Matrix: Defines exactly which cookies fall into "Essential," "Functional," and "Marketing" buckets so your team knows what to block.

  2. Data Flow Diagrams: Detailed logic flows explaining exactly what happens when a user clicks "Reject" versus "Accept."

  3. Dark Pattern Prevention: UI wireframe requirements to ensure your banner doesn't accidentally break the law by hiding the "Reject" button.

II. The Founder’s Implementation Guide (PDF)

  1. Tool Selection: Recommendations for the best Consent Management Platforms (CMPs) to use with this map.

  2. Audit Checklist: How to check if your current banner is actually working or just cosmetic.


Technical Compliance Made Simple.

Today's Price: $99 | Save over 30% off the $145 retail price.
(One-time payment. Instant Download. Fully Editable.)

(getButton) #text=(Buy Now) #icon=(download) #size=(1) #color=(#EB5406)

 

[ Alternative Payment Link]

(getButton) #text=(Alternative Link) #icon=(download) #color=(#123456)


[ Secure Checkout | Instant Access ] 
Trusted by 5200+ Founders



Frequently Asked Questions

  1. Is this a WordPress Plugin?
    No. This is a Specification Document. You hand this to your developer or use it to configure a tool like Cookiebot, OneTrust, or Termly. It tells the tool what rules to follow to ensure you are legally compliant.

  2. Do I need this if I only use Google Analytics?
    Yes. In the EU, Google Analytics requires prior consent. In the US, you must allow users to opt-out of it. This map explains how to set that up so you don't lose your analytics account.

  3. What is GPC?
    Global Privacy Control. It is a setting in modern browsers (like Brave or Firefox) that sends a signal saying "Don't Sell My Data." Under 2026 laws, you are legally required to listen to it and stop tracking immediately.

  4. Can I just block everything by default?
    You can, but it will destroy your marketing data and user experience. The "Geo-Fencing" strategy in this document allows you to keep tracking users in low-regulation regions while being strict only where the law requires it.

Tags