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EFF Angry as Google Keeps 3rd-Party Cookies in Chrome
Richi Jennings | | adtech, Advertising, Advertising and AdTech, adverts, Chrome, CMA, Competition and Markets Authority, cookie, Cookie Consent, cookieconsent, cookies, Data Privacy, EFF, Electronic Frontier Foundation, FLEDGE, FLoC, GOOG, google, Google Chrome, ICO, information commissioner's office, IP Protection, Privacy, Privacy Sandbox, regulatory capture, SB Blogwatch, Surveillance capitalism, Topics, tracking, tracking cookies, web cookie, zero trust
Regulatory capture by stealth? Google changes its mind about third-party tracking cookies—we’re stuck with them for the foreseeable ...
Security Boulevard
Chrome’s Incognito Mode Isn’t as Private as You Think — but Google’s Not Sorry
Richi Jennings | | adtech, Advertising, Advertising and AdTech, adverts, breach of privacy, browser, browser abuse, Chrome, cookie, Cookie Consent, cookieconsent, cookies, customer privacy, Data Privacy, FLEDGE, FLoC, GOOG, google, Google Ad, Google AdSense, Google advertising, Google Chrome, Google Chrome Security, Incognito, Incognito Mode, Link History, Privacy, Privacy Sandbox, SB Blogwatch, Topics, tracking cookies, web cookie
Short term gain for long term pain? Class action attorney David Boies asked for $5,000 per user, but got nothing—except some assurances Google will delete data it no longer needs ...
Security Boulevard
Happy New Year: Google Cookie Block Starts Soon, but Fear Remains
Richi Jennings | | adtech, Advertising, Advertising and AdTech, adverts, cookie, Cookie Consent, cookieconsent, cookies, FLEDGE, FLoC, GOOG, Google Chrome, Privacy, Privacy Sandbox, SB Blogwatch, Topics, tracking cookies, web cookie
2024 almost here: Rollout begins Jan 4, but few trust Google’s motives ...
Security Boulevard
Google Kills 3rd-Party Cookies — but Monopolizes AdTech
Richi Jennings | | adtech, Advertising, Advertising and AdTech, adverts, cookie, Cookie Consent, cookieconsent, cookies, FLEDGE, FLoC, Privacy, Privacy Sandbox, SB Blogwatch, Topics, tracking cookies, web cookie
Firefox looking good right now: “Privacy Sandbox” criticized as a proprietary, hypocritical, anti-competitive, self-serving contradiction ...
Security Boulevard
Google Chrome 3rd Party Cookies Crumbling — Finally!
Richi Jennings | | Chrome, cookie, cookies, FLoC, google, omnomnomnomnomnomcookie, Privacy, Privacy Sandbox, SB Blogwatch, Topics, tracking cookies
Om Nom Nom Nom Nom: Privacy Sandbox inching towards reality. But concerns remain ...
Security Boulevard
FTC Cracks Down on Unauthorized Disclosure of Health Information for Advertising: A Roundup of Recent Enforcement Actions
Privacy Research Team | | consent, cookie, Data Privacy Automation, Federal Trade Commission, FTC, Privacy Policy
Lately, the Federal Trade commission (FTC) has taken an increased interest in protecting the consumers’ digital health information by cracking down on companies deploying unfair and deceptive practices to share user health ...
What Trust and Compliance Looks Like in a Cookieless Digital World
Tripwire Guest Authors | | cookie, IT Security and Data Protection, Privacy, web browser, web cookie
Originally envisaged as a convenient way to store web data, cookies emerged as a powerful marketing tool in the 2000s. For many years, digital marketers relied on cookies for data collection. However, ...
4 Strategies to Mitigate Pass-the-Cookie Attacks
Tripwire Guest Authors | | cookie, cyberattack, data protection, IT Security and Data Protection, vulnerability
Another year, another new set of cybersecurity threats to overcome, outwit and mitigate against. At the beginning of 2021, the cybersecurity world was informed by CISA (the USA Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security ...
SameSite Cookies by Default in Chrome 76 and Above
Beginning its journey almost ten years ago, Google Chrome has become one of the most popular web browsers on the internet and continues to prioritize speed and security in its service to ...
Cross Site Cookie Manipulation
For years, we’ve been told to keep the values of sensitive session cookies unpredictable and complex in order to prevent attacks such as session enumeration. And, it made sense. If the session ...