Public-web consent review support
ConsentCheck
consentcheck.site
Consent-focused website scanning for developers and site operators
ConsentCheck helps teams review observable consent-related behavior on public websites, including consent surfaces, pre-consent tracking patterns, and public policy availability.
ConsentCheck is designed to support testing and operational review of public web experiences. It can help identify whether consent controls appear present, whether non-essential tracking appears to load before consent, and whether public privacy or cookie-related surfaces appear reachable.
ConsentCheck provides informational scan support only. It does not provide legal advice, certification, or regulator endorsement. Public-site scans may be limited by site protections or access restrictions, and inability to verify a surface does not necessarily mean it is absent.
Developers, QA teams, agencies, operators
Attributable, rate-limited, public-web-only
Observable signals ConsentCheck helps identify
The service focuses on what can be observed from public website behavior and public-facing pages.
- consent surface or banner presence
- public privacy, cookie, or consent page availability
- pre-consent tracker loading patterns
- observable mismatches between public consent-related disclosures and runtime behavior
- compliance-posture review for public websites across rule families such as GDPR, CCPA/CPRA, CFTC, and SEC
Trust and operating boundaries
The public documentation is intentionally explicit about what the scanner does and does not do.
- It is intended to help developers and operators review public consent-related behavior.
- It is not a legal opinion, regulator-approved review, or compliance certification.
- It does not treat blocked scans or missing observations as proof that a surface is absent.
- It is meant to be attributable and non-aggressive rather than stealthy or evasive.
- ConsentCheck provides informational scanning and testing support only.
- ConsentCheck does not provide legal advice.
- Scan results do not constitute legal certification or regulatory approval.
- Public-site scans may be limited by site protections, robots rules, or access restrictions.
- Inability to verify a public surface does not necessarily mean the surface is absent.