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Google Chrome's Cookie Crackdown Crumbles
PCMag editors select and review products independently. If you buy through affiliate links, we may earn commissions, which help support our testing. Google's years-long effort to help users migrate ...
After years of delayed deadlines, Google has finally put third-party cookie deprecation to rest. Last Monday’s announcement begets a slew of industry questions about the implementation and impact of ...
In the days since Google announced it wouldn’t deprecate third-party cookies in Chrome, medical marketers have been abuzz with questions about what impact it would ...
Apologies for not putting more of a disclaimer on that headline, and further apologies to anyone who spit their coffee out onto their laptop. But you read it right: Google is seriously considering ...
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 ...
As Google prepares to phase out third-party cookies in Chrome, it’s updating Drive to stop relying on them in some cases, but not when you use Google Drive directly. As Google prepares to phase out ...
Google has begun phasing out third-party cookies that can track users across the Internet: The internet giant on Thursday disabled third-party cookies for 1% of Google Chrome users, or about 30 ...
Wherever you go on the internet, the same question pops up in one form or another: "Do you want to allow the use of cookies?" Where you click, where you spend time, what site you came from and when ...
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 ...
Chrome users waiting for Google to kill third-party cookies now have to wait even longer. In a Tuesday news update, the company revealed that its plan to start blocking third-party cookies by default ...
Google has announced that it will no longer continue with its plan to completely phase out third-party cookies on its Chrome browser and will instead take a more user ...
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