> OP was claiming that any third-party analytics are unacceptable
Don't put words in my mouth. I was not claiming that.
Third-party analytics _that bill themselves "privacy-first"_ are still not what any user would consent to voluntarily, so the "privacy" angle is largely irrelevant. What they should be billing themselves as is "not Google Analytics", which will be factually correct and somewhat relevant.
>> OP was claiming that any third-party analytics are unacceptable
> Don't put words in my mouth. I was not claiming that.
You stated that only self-hosted analytics were acceptable. Your exact words were:
> The only way to do analytics in a way that's respectful to the visitors' privacy is with an installable on-host software. That's it.
This implies - to me - that in your view all third-party analytics are unacceptable from privacy perspective.
I'm not sure how else I was supposed to parse that statement?
Either way, I disagreed with that, and said it's certainly possible to work with third-party service providers, of many kinds including analytics, while still respecting your customers' privacy.
Don't put words in my mouth. I was not claiming that.
Third-party analytics _that bill themselves "privacy-first"_ are still not what any user would consent to voluntarily, so the "privacy" angle is largely irrelevant. What they should be billing themselves as is "not Google Analytics", which will be factually correct and somewhat relevant.