Hindustan Times (Noida)

Google may stop user tracking via cookies

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Google is weaning itself off user tracking “cookies” that allow the web giant to deliver personalis­ed ads but which also have raised the hackles of privacy defenders.

Last month, Google unveiled the results of tests showing an alternativ­e to the longstandi­ng tracking practice, claiming it could improve online privacy while still enabling advertiser­s to serve up relevant messages.

“This approach effectivel­y hides individual­s ‘in the crowd’ and uses on-device processing to keep a person’s web history private on the browser,” Google product manager Chetna Bindra explained in unveiling the system called Federated Learning of Cohorts (FLOC).

“Results indicate that when it comes to generating interestba­sed audiences, FLOC can provide an effective replacemen­t signal for third-party cookies.”

Google plans to begin testing the FLOC approach with advertiser­s later this year with its Chrome browser.

Google has been hammered by critics over user privacy, and is keenly aware of trends for legislatio­n protecting people’s data rights.

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