Headline

Is Google’s third party cookie blocking delay a smart move? Here’s what Yahoo! says

Google has announced postponing its plan to remove third-party cookies from its Chrome browser. The move that users have been waiting for since 2020 has been pushed back, stirring up the browser world.

“We now intend to begin phasing out third-party cookies in Chrome in the second half of 2024,” Google said in a blog post on Wednesday.


Read more: Could Meta owned ‘metaverse’ become a lotus eaters’ island where we forget Facebook’s murky past?


This means the tech giant will continue to use privacy invasive cookies to track user activity, so that we continue to marvel at how Google ads suggest exactly what we’ve been thinking.

While responses have been pouring in from experts, competitor Yahoo! has commented that the future of identity will be about succeeding through information gathered from sources where the user consents to give it.

Iván Markman

The future of identity lies in the ability to leverage direct, consumer-consented sources and to be smarter about signals that are not attached to a consumer’s identity

Iván Markman, Chief Business Officer, Yahoo, shared his perspective on the development, “The future of identity lies in the ability to leverage direct, consumer-consented sources and to be smarter about signals that are not attached to a consumer’s identity. While any delay gives the industry more time to test and learn, adapting solutions today brings greater reach across all inventory – with or without IDs.”

Google had published in 2020 about a plan to phase out support for third-party tracking cookies in Chrome in the coming two years. The tech giant began the Privacy Sandbox initiative to offer privacy friendly option to third-party cookies and cross-site tracking.

“Over the past several months, we have released trial versions of a number of new Privacy Sandbox APIs in Chrome for developers to test,” Google is now saying. The company says it’s expanding the testing windows for the Privacy Sandbox APIs before disabling third-party cookies in Chrome.


Read more: Reuters probe about Amazon’s unfair business practices in India reveals the big bad side of big tech


Big tech owns almost everything about our identity now. One browsing session and it’s obvious the amount of information they have gathered, information that a third party then uses to advertise their wares to us.

Creepy as it is, third party cookies aren’t the only way to track users. According to Cookiebot, other technologies like Local Storage, IndexedDB, and Web SQL can track users just like third-party cookies. In fact, any technology that allows saving data on the user’s device from browsers can track the user.

Navanwita Bora Sachdev

Navanwita is the editor of The Tech Panda who also frequently publishes stories in news outlets such as The Indian Express, Entrepreneur India, and The Business Standard

Recent Posts

Benchmarking LLM Coding Proficiency Across Languages

In my previous benchmarks [1, 2], I showed that LLMs can successfully solve most Leetcode problems.…

7 hours ago

Is AI really paying off? The hidden gap between adoption & RoI

Organizations are investing heavily in AI with the promise of faster work, better collaboration, and…

8 hours ago

Britive joins AWS Security Hub Extended Plan to eliminate standing privileges across 

Cloud security firm Britive announced that its unified privileged access management (PAM) platform is now…

1 day ago

AI Launches: Conversational AI, Cybersecurity, Wellness & Communication

The Tech Panda takes a look at recent launches in the superfast field of Artificial…

1 day ago

Funding alert: Tech startups that raked in moolah this month

The Tech Panda takes a look at recent funding events in the tech ecosystem, seeking…

1 day ago

Why Edge AI is crucial for real-time traffic surveillance on Indian roads & highways

India has one of the most extensive road networks in the world, growing at its…

2 days ago