User agent sovereignty would be nice... except the most used browser and 1/2 of smartphones are controlled by Google, the largest ad tracking company on the planet.
We're way past the 90s.
But I do agree with you that "free market tech" created the problem of "tracking cookies are ubiquitous and users don't know how to control them". But then regulators just layered another annoyance on top of that, instead of solving that actual problem.
Also never forget we already had a perfectly good solution in the form of Do Not Track headers that a benevolent governing body would have simply mandated abiding by. Instead we have this shithole.
The only way it ever would have been respected if it was required to cryptographically sign an acceptance of cookies, then the server was required to retain that attestation as proof of acceptance, subject to legal liability if they were found in possession of tracking data without a valid attestation.
Absent enforceability, even when the server actively and maliciously decided to ignore it, it was a toothless solution.
Brave has shown that we can have an user agent that is aligned with the user, even if the browser engine is made by Google.
I'd say it's probably not a good day for Brave advocacy. Neither is any other day.
I heard recently that's actually wrong. We are born helpless, and learning to take control. The helplessness is innate, and we learn to overcome it.
In democracy, the innate helplessness of citizens is overcome by learning to participate in governance - activism, elections, public functions and so on.
The people who say "government does nothing good ever" are the ones who want to keep people in their natural helpless state. It's like telling a student, "you're doing it all wrong and can never be good".
For reference, in my experience, the public works projects that get front page news coverage with tons of anecdotes from locals about how incredibly helpful and long-needed the installation was, are those that were completely unsanctioned.
And the only path to substantial policy change in all of history has always been violent revolution.
But especially in democracy, you have a lot of opportunities to use official ways to institute change, like being elected or vote.
I also think there is plenty of positive social change that happens non-violently.