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cookies

Cookie Craze & Coffee Buzz: 7 Brew Drive-Thru and Crumbl Cookies Coming to Salisbury

Cookie Craze Alert: Crumbl Expands with New Stores, TikTok Hype & $2B Sale Talk

Crumbl’s latest moves: Real-estate news on Oct. 21, 2025 reports that franchisees have leased Salisbury’s Commons shopping center for the chain’s first Eastern Shore bakery ts2.tech. The 2,300‑sq‑ft corner unit (near Ulta and Best Buy) is under construction, with an opening aimed for late 2025 ts2.tech. SVN Miller broker Kelly Jeter – who helped negotiate the deal – praised Crumbl’s “changing menu” and “viral flavors,” saying the new store will be “a welcome addition to the Salisbury community” foodchainmagazine.com. (The site will open alongside a 7 Brew drive-thru café, marking a new sweet-and-coffee combo for the area.) Flavor & marketing: Crumbl’s
Cookie Craze & Coffee Buzz: 7 Brew Drive-Thru and Crumbl Cookies Coming to Salisbury

Cookie Craze & Coffee Buzz: 7 Brew Drive-Thru and Crumbl Cookies Coming to Salisbury

Local Expansion: Crumbl Cookies and 7 Brew Arrive in Salisbury Salisbury’s retail scene is getting sweeter (and more caffeinated). Real estate firm SVN | Miller Commercial reports that Crumbl Cookies – famous for its giant pink-box cookies and rotating menu – secured a lease at The Commons shopping center sbybiz.org. The 2,300-square-foot corner space sits beside Ulta and Best Buy. SVN advisor Kelly Jeter led the search, saying Crumbl’s unique concept and “viral flavors” should excite area residents wmdt.com. Build-out has already started, with a target opening in November – just in time for holiday cookie cravings. Meanwhile, 7 Brew, the Arkansas-born drive-thru
21 October 2025
Goodbye, Cookie Pop-Ups? Inside the EU’s Battle to Fix Cookie Consent Laws

Goodbye, Cookie Pop-Ups? Inside the EU’s Battle to Fix Cookie Consent Laws

The Origin of the EU’s Cookie Consent Law (ePrivacy Directive) The story begins in the early 2000s. In 2002, the EU passed the Privacy and Electronic Communications Directive (Directive 2002/58/EC), commonly called the ePrivacy Directive. This law was intended to safeguard privacy in the digital realm – covering things like the confidentiality of communications, spam emails, and online tracking. Originally, the ePrivacy Directive said websites should give users the right to refuse or opt out of cookies, but it did not yet mandate an explicit opt-in for most cookies. However, by the end of that decade, concerns about online tracking
22 September 2025
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