Google (finally) started its shift away from third-party cookies

Image of a woman shopping online
Showrooming describes the behaviour of checking out a product in-store and completing the purchase online. Photo: Bigstock
On January 4, while many of us were still recovering from New Year celebrations, 32 million randomly selected Google Chrome users had third-party cookies disabled in their web browsers.  It wasn’t a mistake. Rather, Google had finally begun its long-talked-about phase-out of third-party cookies.  In case the billions of articles about the sunsetting of cookies have passed you by, here’s a quick explainer. Third-party cookies are pieces of data stored on your browser by websites. Cookie

This content is for IR Pro subscribers only.

Subscribe now to unlock an all-access pass.

IR Pro - monthly

$4 USD for the first 30 days. (Auto renews at $20 USD per month.)
  • Unlimited news access
  • Exclusive members only masterclasses (live and on-demand)
  • Weekly careers advice
  • Weekly and quarterly digital magazines delivered to your inbox
Subscribe now
MOST POPULAR

IR Pro - annual

$228 USD per year. (Auto renews annually)
  • Unlimited news access
  • Exclusive members only masterclasses (live and on-demand)
  • Weekly careers advice
  • Weekly and quarterly digital magazines delivered to your inbox
Subscribe now