Google Ends Third-party Cookie Tracking
What started as a perfect way for tracking users online about their interests and internet activity is now coming to an end. Third-party cookies or just the browser cookies placed by third-parties into your device for knowing your interests have been invasive. Though this helped both users to get relevant ads and advertisers with a high turnover ratio, they’re considered privacy evils. Many new-age browsers like Brave and Microsoft’s Edge have stopped tracking through third-party cookies, whereas Apple’s Safari and Mozilla’s Firefox have ended this practice recently. But their stance didn’t affect the industry much, as over two-thirds of the browser market is occupied by Google’s Chrome. And if Google decides to stop this practice means a whole internet era is ending. Although, Google isn’t doing this without a plan. It revealed modern alternatives for tracking, which would replace the current third-party cookies tracking system. Also, it affirmed that it wouldn’t create a new system similar to cookies in the future. In its blog post, Google said to have achieved Since this is less invasive, users are more likely to applaud Google’s new announcement and happily wave goodbye to the third-party cookie tracking system.