Absolutely. In fact, in our Home Depot survey, we found that when people asked for an e-mail receipt instead of a printed one, the information was communicated to Meta. However, this was not indicated at all to customers at the checkout. One of the company's responses was that it was in their policies on their website and that customers could find this information there. We told them it wasn't acceptable to put such a burden on people, and that it wasn't part of people's reasonable expectations to have to research this extensively before giving consent. This kind of practice leads to consent fatigue.
Recently, we won our case against Facebook over its consent practices. The Federal Court of Appeal pointed out that the texts on which Facebook's consent practices were based were often longer than an Alice Munro short story. It's complex and doesn't help users understand what they're consenting to.