Consenting [verb]
Definition of Consenting:
agree
Synonyms of Consenting:
● Comply
● Give in
● Accede
● Okay
● Permit
● Assent
● Accept
● Bless
● Fold
● Concede
● Let
● Yield
● Allow
● Sanction
● Concur
● Yes
● Approve
● Give up
● Say yes
Opposite/Antonyms of Consenting:
● Differ
● Oppose
● Keep
● Hold
● Disagree
● Object
● Prevent
● Forbid
● Dispute
● Dissent
● Disallow
● Veto
● Reject
● Refuse
● Protest
● Deny
● Demur
● Condemn
Sentence/Example of Consenting:
According to NOYB, even when this change materializes, it will not be enough to keep Apple on the right side of the law—because it won’t stop the company itself from tracking users without their explicit consent.
It says SROs must obtain written consent to access a student’s education records from a parent or guardian if the child is 18 or older.
As an industry, we need to approach consent with user experience and innovation in mind—not compliance.
For example, YouTube and Google agreed to pay the FTC a $170 million settlement for collecting personal information from children on YouTube without parental consent.
If you’ve ever used a 23andMe ancestry spit kit and provided consent for your data to be used for large genomic studies, you’ve benefited from those guidelines.
However, only four teams adopted this idea—called KERS, for kinetic energy recovery system—during the year, and it was abandoned by mutual consent at the end of that season.
Riney alleged that the city did not seek the landlord’s consent to alter the building with renovations exceeding $2 million and that the city did not provide invoices for work funded by a $5 million tenant improvement allowance from the developer.
Absolutism, in the militia world, is the idea that fundamental constitutional rights – like freedom of speech, the right to bear arms and the right to own property – cannot be restricted or regulated by the state without a citizen’s consent.
In Georgia, you can request criminal history records for another individual only if you have their signed consent.
If parents have signed the consent form, and move to challenge the services the district is providing later, it’s possible a judge would say they have agreed to allow services online, rather than in person.