Google guarantees main modifications in the way it tracks customers across the web

Google has devoted to stop following customers across the web and says it will have to switch “in direction of a extra privacy-first internet”.
Google has committed to stop following users around the internet and says it will move “towards a more privacy-first web”.

Original articleOriginal article
Author: The Independent

The Independent has recently written 11 articles on similar topics including :
  1. "Wall Street has its eyes on big tech after some of the biggest companies in the world posted lackluster quarterly financial performances". (February 3, 2023)
  2. "The company has had on-and-off bans since November". (February 22, 2021)
  3. "Device is reportedly being developed by the firms X moonshot factory". (March 5, 2021)
  4. "EU regulators cleared Googles plan to buy fitness tracking device maker Fitbit after the company promised to silo off user data and not use it for advertising". (December 17, 2020)
  5. "Fallouts and legal struggles between governments and tech companies are likely to happen more and more, writes Andrew Griffin, and the consequences will be felt the world over". (January 22, 2021)
  6. "Google says it wont develop new ways to follow individual users across the internet after it phases out existing ad tracking technology from Chrome browsers in an upcoming overhaul aimed at tightening up privacy". (March 3, 2021)
  7. "Technology company described the Capitol riots as disturbing". (January 26, 2021)
  8. "A Google services outage this week and potential impacts from a snowstorm in the Northeast highlight the fragile chain of connectivity that's powering widespread remote learning during the coronavirus pandemic". (December 16, 2020)
  9. "A new Lords report warns of a fundamental imbalance of power between news publishers and online platforms". (November 27, 2020)
  10. "Balloons float 12 miles above the Earth, well above commercial airplanes". (December 4, 2020)
  11. "President Donald Trump has pardoned a former Google engineer who plead guilty to stealing trade secrets before joining Ubers effort to build robotic vehicles for its ride-hailing service". (January 20, 2021)
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