Google will delete browsing data the company compiled on Chrome users who thought their data wasn’t being collected while using Incognito mode, according to a new report from the Wall Street Journal ...
It turns out that Google's Incognito web browsing mode has not been incognito after all. A MARTÍNEZ, HOST: Yeah, the tech giant says it will delete the browsing data of millions of people who thought ...
Google will destroy the private browsing history of millions of people who used "incognito" mode in its Chrome browser as a part of a settlement filed to federal court on Monday in a case over the ...
Google is settling its incognito lawsuit for $0. Instead of monetary compensation, the settlement includes Google deleting data records and making changes to disclosure agreements. Google is deleting ...
Google has agreed to delete or anonymize Chrome web browser user records, collected particularly in “Incognito” mode. The search giant has dodged a $5 billion settlement, but the company may not be in ...
What just happened? Google has agreed to delete browsing data that it collected from Chrome users who were in Incognito mode. The move is part of a settlement in a lawsuit that claims the company ...
(TNS) — Google will delete billions of records it scooped from "Incognito" mode web browsing of about 136 million U.S. users but will continue to collect data through the not-so-private browser ...
Every browser keeps a record of every single website you visit, known as search history. Search history proves beneficial at times, such as when you have to revisit the websites later on, say, to ...