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Google’s Privacy Sandbox: What you need to know

Martech

Google’s Privacy Sandbox is a space where a series of complex proposals to protect user privacy have been developed and are undergoing (or have undergone) extensive testing. Google might feel that the transparency has not been appreciated.

Privacy 116
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Digital Privacy Landscape Changes You Need to Know

Heinz Marketing

Apple is now allowing people to choose if they want an app to be able to track them with their App Tracking Transparency feature, and people are often understandably saying “no”, resulting in companies like Facebook feeling the pain in lost revenue. Transparency isn’t a bad thing, and with the knowledge, some are opting in.

Privacy 96
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Ethical data management is a win for marketers

Martech

With campaigns deploying across so many digital channels, marketers are aggregating more and more data, which means they have to also stay on top of privacy compliance. All these day-to-day activities involve the sharing of our personal data with companies. Privacy laws in Europe and in some U.S. Be transparent.

Ethics 106
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California’s New Privacy Agency: Is Your Company Ready?

Zoominfo

California has been setting the pace on consumer privacy protections for nearly two decades, passing laws that regulate how businesses like Amazon, Google and Facebook can collect, store and use consumer data. “That’s the foundation of all new and emerging privacy laws.”

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Third-party cookies – what are they, what’s happening to them, & what to do

Choozle

While third-party cookies are placed in a visitor’s browser automatically, users (as well as the ad tech industry) are pushing for more control and transparency of any consumer data. In February of 2020, a Google blog post announced the phaseout of third-party cookies and gave initial reasoning for the pivot.

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5 Steps for Marketers to Prepare for the Coming Cookie Disruption

Adobe Experience Cloud Blog

Google announced the end of third-party cookies on its Chrome browser. To set the record straight, Google won’t replace third-party cookies with new individual user tracking, and it also intends to remove support for third-party cookies. Privacy protection and anonymity are the two main reasons for this step.

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FTC Issues Final Privacy Framework Report to Protect Users’ Data

readwrite

The FTC provides guidelines for Do-Not-Track provisions, how information can be tracked on mobile devices and how large platform providers like Facebook and Google can use consumer data. ” While Google and Facebook drew the ire of the FTC, any company that tracks personal consumer data on the Web is now put on notice.

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