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 ...
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 ...
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 ...
Third-party cookie deprecation truly is a tale of “The Boy Who Cried Wolf.” After delaying its self-imposed deadline to drop cookies on Chrome twice, Google announced on Tuesday it will push its ...
Today marks the first of many upcoming moments of silence in Google’s years-long plan to kill cookies. As of this morning, the Chrome web browser disabled cookies for 1% of its users, about 30 million ...
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 ...
Google is planning to keep third-party cookies in its Chrome browser, it said on Monday, after years of pledging to phase out the tiny packets of code meant to track users on the internet. The major ...
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 ...