Orlando Sentinel

Google: UK offered role in cookie phaseout

- By Kelvin Chan

LONDON — Google is offering U.K. regulators a role overseeing its phasing out of ad-tracking technology from its Chrome browser, in a package of commitment­s the tech giant is proposing to apply globally to head off a competitio­n investigat­ion.

The U.K. competitio­n watchdog has been investigat­ing Google’s proposals to remove so-called third-party cookies over concerns they would undermine digital ad competitio­n and entrench the company’s market power.

Google on Friday offered a set of commitment­s including giving the Competitio­n and Markets Authority an oversight role as the company designs and develops a replacemen­t technology.

“The emergence of tech giants such as Google has presented competitio­n authoritie­s around the world with new challenges that require a new approach,” Andrea Coscelli, the watchdog’s chief executive, said.

The authority will work with tech companies to “shape their behavior and protect competitio­n to the benefit of consumers,” he said.

Google’s promises also include “substantia­l limits” on how it will use and combine individual user data for digital ad purposes and a pledge not to discrimina­te against rivals in favor of its own ad businesses with the new technology.

If the commitment­s are accepted, they will be applied globally, the company said.

Third-party cookies — snippets of code that log user info — are used to help businesses more effectivel­y target advertisin­g and fund free online content such as newspapers. However, they’ve also been a long-standing source of privacy concerns.

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