Google is tracking your online behavior in the name of advertising, reintroducing a data collection process that ingests all of your online signals (from IP address to complex browser information) and pinpoints unique users or devices, also known as "digital fingerprinting."
The company's updated platform program policiesinclude relaxed restrictions on advertisers and personalized ad targeting across a range of devices, an outcome of a larger "advertising ecosystem shift" and the advancement of privacy-enhancing technologies (PETs) like on-device processing and trusted execution environments, in the words of the company.
A departure from its longstanding pledge to user choice and privacy, Google argues these technologies offer enough protection for users while also creating “new ways for brands to manage and activate their data safely and securely." The new feature will be available to advertisers beginning Feb. 16, 2025.
SEE ALSO: Supposed expert reviews of Google Gemini outputs are coming from non-experts"With new innovations like PETs to mitigate risks, we see an opportunity to set a high privacy bar on the use of data like IP. We can do this by applying privacy-preserving protections that help businesses reach their customers across these new platforms without the need to re-identify them," writes Google. "And because we’re looking to encourage responsible data use as the new standard across the web, we’ll also partner with the broader ads industry and help make PETs more accessible."
In July, Google announced it was backtracking on a decision to kill third-party cookies, instead putting the role of privacy watchdog in the hands of users by adding personalized privacy options to a new product known as the Privacy Sandbox.
Contrary to other data collection tools like cookies, digital fingerprinting is difficult to spot, and thus even harder for even privacy-conscious users to erase or block. On Dec. 19, the UK's Information Commissioner’s Office (ICO) — a data protection and privacy regulator — labeled Google "irresponsible" for the policy change, saying the shift to fingerprinting is an unfair means of tracking users, reducing choice and control over their personal information. The watchdog also warned that the move could encourage riskier advertiser behavior.
"Google itself has previously said that fingerprinting does not meet users’ expectations for privacy, as users cannot easily consent to it as they would cookies. This in turn means they cannot control how their information is collected. To quote Google’s own position on fingerprinting from 2019: 'We think this subverts user choice and is wrong,'" wrote ICO executive director of regulatory risk Stephen Almond.
The ICO warned that it will intervene if Google cannot demonstrate existing legal requirements for such tech, including options to secure freely-given consent, ensure fair processing, and uphold the right to erasure: "Businesses should not consider fingerprinting a simple solution to the loss of third-party cookies and other cross-site tracking signals."
Copyright © 2023 Powered by
Google brings back digital fingerprinting to track users for advertising-寸地尺天网
sitemap
文章
2133
浏览
7561
获赞
14
Google says no to Zoom
Zoom, the videoconferencing software that people seem to alternately love and hate these days, is noPhone company shuts down troll in the most spectacularly blunt way
It's been proven time and time again that messing with Tesco Mobile on Twitter is a bad idea.PeopleBest TV deal: Save over $200 on the Hisense 55
SAVE OVER $200: As of Nov. 14, the Hisense 55-Inch Canvas TV is on sale for $798 at Amazon. That's 2Youtube TV Black Friday deal: Get $23 off 2 months
SAVE $46: As of Nov. 28, YouTube TV is offering two months of the service for $23 off the usual pricHTC launches Vive Sync beta, offers businesses free VR meetings
Hundreds of millions of people are taking online meetings from home due to the coronavirus lockdownsLight up the John Oliver signal: The battle over Net Neutrality is back
Paging John Oliver. Net neutrality is once again under fire. This time, the threat comes from the goPhone company shuts down troll in the most spectacularly blunt way
It's been proven time and time again that messing with Tesco Mobile on Twitter is a bad idea.PeopleBest early Cyber Monday Echo deal: Save over $50 on Echo Dot Kids
SAVE OVER $50: As of Dec. 1, the Echo Dot Kids with Echo Glow is available for $37.99 in Amazon's eaYouPorn launches new app for more discreet mobile viewing
YouPorn is getting in on the app game.The adult website is launching their own app that says will brEarly Black Friday 2
Table of ContentsTable of ContentsUPDATE: Nov. 19, 2024, 11:00 a.m. EST This article has been updateHuge snake falls through gym's ceiling because even indoors isn't safe
So you think you're safe from snakes inside? Not in Australia.Chantal Vaughan, the owner of Bokwa CQ'Game of Thrones' actor Lena Headey opens up about mental health on Twitter
When you're so used to seeing actors dressed up and in character, it's sometimes easy to forget thatCreatively, a new job platform, launches to help designers and other creatives find work
For designers, illustrators, and photographers, LinkedIn just doesn't cut it. That's why CreativelyBest Buy Black Friday 2024: Ad and best deals
Black Friday is looming large on the horizon, promising big discounts on TVs, laptops, headphones, sFirst woman to run Boston Marathon returns, and this time she has another powerful message
Fifty years ago, a clever, determined woman named Kathrine Switzer crossed the finish line at the Bo