Google has announced Privacy Sandbox, which removed tracking cookies in Chrome, is being discontinued in a major update.
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Google delays Chrome’s cookie phase-out, keeping 3 billion users exposed to tracking amid privacy and regulator concerns.
Stephen Shankland worked at CNET from 1998 to 2024 and wrote about processors, digital photography, AI, quantum computing, computer science, materials science, supercomputers, drones, browsers, 3D ...
Google is ending its Privacy Sandbox project, affecting billions of Chrome users and signaling a shift in online privacy and ...
Google shared details on a recently introduced Chrome feature that changes how cookies are requested, with early tests showing increased performance across all platforms. In the past, single-process ...
After years of seeing other browsers improve privacy features, Google is now offering a native Chrome feature to block cookies from being accessed by third-party clients. With this feature, it will ...
As of writing, Google already has efforts to protect users from these cookies. One of these is the option to allow users to reject cookies used by websites they are accessing. However, Google's ...
It's finally time. Google already announced that as part of its ongoing "Privacy Sandbox" initiative, it'll begin to restrict third-party cookies in Chrome starting ...
With all the focus on FAST and other advertising-based channels, there’s been a surprising lack of attention on Google's once-imminent, now-delayed Cookie Apocalypse, a nickname for Google's decision ...
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