Skip to content

Eat My Cookies vs I Don't Care About Cookies

I Don't Care About Cookies (IDCAC) is one of the most widely installed consent extensions — but it takes a fundamentally different approach, and was acquired by Avast in 2022, raising questions about independence and data practices.

FeatureEat My CookiesIDCAC
Open SourcePartially
No Backend / No Cloud ComponentUnknown post-acquisition
No Tracking / No AnalyticsUnknown post-acquisition
Properly Rejects via CMP API (not just hides)
Accept All AutomationPrimarily
Custom Per-Category Preferences
Per-Site Exceptions
Transparent Failure Warnings
CCPA SupportPartial
GDPR SupportBanner-hiding only
Activity Log & Badges
Independent / Not Acquired
OwnershipEat My CookiesAvast (acquired 2022)
PriceFree (donations)Free

The Avast acquisition

In 2022, Avast acquired I Don't Care About Cookies. Avast has previously faced scrutiny over its own data collection practices — in 2020, a subsidiary was found to be selling user browsing data. We are not claiming IDCAC currently does anything harmful. We are pointing out that for a tool you trust to manage your consent posture across the entire web, the ownership of that tool is a relevant consideration.

What IDCAC does well

IDCAC has been around since 2012 and has broad site coverage. It removes cookie banners quickly and without friction for most users, and has a very large filter list built up over years.

Where Eat My Cookies differs

Eat My Cookies uses actual CMP APIs to properly record your rejection — not just hiding the banner visually. It's fully open source with no corporate acquisition, no cloud component, and transparent failure warnings when a site can't be handled properly.