> That criticism escalated in January, when Google said it would phase out the use of third-party cookies in its Chrome browser within two years to enhance consumer privacy. But cookies — small files a browser uses to track visits to websites — are also a key tool for publishers to demonstrate the effectiveness of advertising campaigns to ad buyers.
> Google’s own estimates show that eliminating those cookies will reduce advertising revenue to news outlets that show online ads by as much as 62 percent.
The fact that they're focusing on this, of all things, does not exactly boost my confidence that this investigation will be handled competently or in the public interest.
Don't like this. Google has created two extremely valuable open source systems - android and chromium - to protect their search engine business. This is something we should encourage. I understand the concern about google's power, but I think a better way to deal with it is to force them to prompt users to choose a search engine, like the EU did with android.
> Google’s own estimates show that eliminating those cookies will reduce advertising revenue to news outlets that show online ads by as much as 62 percent.
The fact that they're focusing on this, of all things, does not exactly boost my confidence that this investigation will be handled competently or in the public interest.