Bangkok Post

Google to stop tracking individual users for ads

- SAN FRANCISCO:

Google on Wednesday pledged to steer clear of tracking individual online activity when it begins implementi­ng a new system for targeting ads without the use of so-called “cookies.”

The internet giant’s widely used Chrome browser will this month begin testing an alternativ­e to the tracking practice that it believes could improve online privacy while still enabling advertiser­s to serve up relevant messages.

“We’re making explicit that once third-party cookies are phased out, we will not build alternate identifier­s to track individual­s as they browse across the web, nor will we use them in our products,” ads privacy and trust product management director David Temkin said in a blog post.

“Advances in aggregatio­n, anonymisat­ion, and on-device process and other privacy-preserving technologi­es offer a clear path to replacing individual identifier­s.”

The move comes with Google hammered by critics over user privacy, and increased scrutiny of privacy and protecting people’s data rights.

Growing fear of cookie-tracking has prompted support for internet rights legislatio­n such as GDPR in Europe.

Temkin described the new Google system as “privacy-preserving ... while still delivering results for advertiser­s and publishers.”

Safari and Firefox browsers have already done away with third-party cookies, but they are still used at the world’s most popular browser, Chrome.

Chrome accounted for 63% of the global browser market last year, according to StatCounte­r.

Last month, Google unveiled the results of tests showing an alternativ­e to cookies called Federated Learning of Cohorts (FLoC) which identifies groups of people with common interests without individual­ised tracking.

Some businesses have objected to the Google plan claiming it will force more advertiser­s into its “walled garden.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand