Los Angeles Times

Cookie clampdown could benefit Google

Ending third-party tracking gives the firm a chance to boost its online ad dominance.

- BY ALEX WEBB Webb writes for Bloomberg.

If you lived west of the Mississipp­i at the dawn of the 20th century, there must have been a moment when it became clear that the Wild West of old was no more. Perhaps it was the arrival of the railroad, or the last stagecoach robbery or the introducti­on of a federal income tax.

For the web, that moment might just be Google’s decision Tuesday to end third-party tracking of people’s browsing habits. It’s a move that will better protect user data, but it also provides an opportunit­y for the Alphabet Inc. unit to extend its dominance of online advertisin­g.

The advertisin­g technology industry has long been a Wild West of its own, largely thanks to the proliferat­ion of seemingly innocuous little files known as cookies that nourished hordes of startups feeding on the data they generated.

When internet users visit a website, files are deposited on their computers that record the visit. Many sites, if not most of them, include cookies from other firms, which means companies can track users’ progress across the web.

As those data accumulate — and users browse new shoes on one website, film reviews on another, train tickets on a third and so on — ad tech firms can gradually build a profile of their interests, spending power and demographi­c attributes. The problem is that users often have no idea who exactly is gathering those personal data. In many ways, ad tech is the lubricant for the modern internet: Its proceeds pay for much of the web’s operating costs.

In 2017, Apple Inc. started blocking third-party cookies on its Safari web browser to stymie the practice. Last year, Mozilla Corp.’s Firefox did the same. Google is finally following suit with

Chrome, which has significan­tly more users than its competitor­s.

The decision is a nobrainer for the search giant, which regularly asserts that search terms are its most useful tool for targeting relevant ads. And ever since the European Union’s General Data Protection Regulation kicked in, cookies have been dying. The rules included measures that made it easier for users to opt out of cookie-based ad-tracking. Within three months of the legislatio­n coming into force in 2018, the number of thirdparty cookies found on news websites in the region fell 22%, according to the Reuters

Institute. Similar digital privacy legislatio­n is being rolled out in California and around the world.

But the European privacy law also made life harder for a cohort of second-tier ad tech players trying to compete with the likes of Google and Facebook Inc. The regulation’s provision to prevent data being shared wantonly with third parties seemed to give the tech giants an opportunit­y to tighten their control over user data. Rivals such as Sizmek Inc. have since gone bankrupt.

Putting an end to thirdparty cookies could have a similar effect — cement

Google’s control at the expense of rivals. After Tuesday’s announceme­nt, shares in French ad tech firm Criteo fell as much as 14%. After all, if you’re using Chrome, Google is still likely to know your browsing habits. Data that advertiser­s might formerly have obtained from those third parties might become most readily available from Google itself.

It’s a move that could appear anti-competitiv­e and might explain why Google isn’t enforcing the change immediatel­y but instead phasing it in gradually over two years — with feedback from the ad tech “ecosystem,” as director of Chrome engineerin­g Justin Schuh wrote in an accompanyi­ng blog post. That approach might take the wind out of accusation­s of brazen anticompet­itiveness.

For publishers, it will most likely accelerate the shift toward requiring users to register for their websites because that will be the best way to determine who exactly is browsing their content and thus how to serve appropriat­e ads. That could become a problem for sites that depend on sporadic visitors more than they do a loyal audience.

There are still other channels where ad tech’s worst practices remain rife, through the use of digital fingerprin­ting, mobile apps and other means. But the industry’s gunslingin­g days are nearing an end, and Google is the sheriff.

 ?? Kimihiro Hoshino AFP/Getty Images ?? IF YOU are using Chrome, Google is still likely to know your browsing habits, even if third parties don’t. Above, Google CEO Sundar Pichai, shown in 2012.
Kimihiro Hoshino AFP/Getty Images IF YOU are using Chrome, Google is still likely to know your browsing habits, even if third parties don’t. Above, Google CEO Sundar Pichai, shown in 2012.

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