City
Epaper

Google to kill 3rd-party cookies for 1% of Chrome users early next year

By IANS | Published: May 19, 2023 10:15 AM

New Delhi, May 19 Google has announced it will migrate one per cent of Chrome users to Privacy ...

Open in App

New Delhi, May 19 Google has announced it will migrate one per cent of Chrome users to Privacy Sandbox and deprecate third-party cookies for them in Q1 2024.

The move will support developers in conducting real world experiments that assess the readiness and effectiveness of their products without third-party cookies, said Anthony Chavez, VP, Privacy Sandbox.

The Privacy Sandbox is an ecosystem-wide initiative to ensure an open and thriving web, by improving user privacy and giving businesses the tools they need to succeed online.

Google has collaborated with the web ecosystem to develop new, privacy-preserving technologies that don't rely on cross-site tracking identifiers or covert techniques like fingerprinting.

"In addition, in Q4 of 2023, we will introduce the ability for developers to simulate Chrome third-party cookie deprecation for a configurable percentage of their users. This will enable developer-controlled testing that can benefit from higher levels of third party cookie-less traffic," Chavez informed.

Last year, Google expanded testing so that developers can evaluate these new technologies as they incorporate them into their solutions.

Starting with the July Chrome release, and over the following weeks, the company will make the Privacy Sandbox relevance and measurement APIs available to all Chrome users.

"With this, developers can utilise these APIs to conduct scaled, live-traffic testing, as they prepare to operate without third-party cookies," the company noted.

"To get ready for the web without third-party cookies, it's important that the ecosystem be prepared in advance, including evaluating solutions which incorporate the Privacy Sandbox APIs," said Google.

The plan has been developed in consultation with the UK's Competition and Markets Authority (CMA).

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: Competition and Markets AuthorityAnthony chavezgoogleukNew DelhiGoogle PlayGoogle MapsGoogle Play StoreNew Delhi Lok SabhaGoogle HomeGoogle StoreGoogle Cloud
Open in App

Related Stories

NationalFire Breaks Out in Delhi House, Four Vehicles Gutted in Blaze

MaharashtraBhima-Koregaon Case: Supreme Court Grants Bail to Gautam Navlakha in Elgar Parishad Case After Two Years of House Arrest

NationalNew Delhi: 30-Year-Old Man Arrested for Demanding Rs 20 Lakh From Car Showroom Owner

TechnologyChatGPT-Developer OpenAI to Unveil Competitor to Google Search On May 13

NationalNew Delhi: 28-Year-Old Man Held for Molesting Minor Boy in Metro

Technology Realted Stories

TechnologyAfter seven years, WHO updates antibiotic-resistant bacteria list

TechnologyDelhivery posts Rs 69 crore net loss in Jan-March quarter, CBO Sandeep Barasia quits

Technology1 in 4 Indians faced cyber threat in Jan-March period: Report

TechnologyEU tells Microsoft to provide information on GenAI risks in Bing search else face fine

TechnologyWipro appoints Sanjeev Jain as COO as Amit Choudhary moves on