Every week, the Array team reviews the latest news and analysis about the evolving field of eDiscovery to bring you the topics and trends you need to know. This week’s post covers the period of April ...
Google will not make any to changes to how third-party cookies work on the Chrome browser at all. Anthony Chavez, Google VP for Privacy Sandbox, has announced that ...
Earlier this month, the United States Department of Health and Human Services’ Office of Civil Rights (“OCR”), the organization that has jurisdiction over enforcement of the Health Insurance ...
Remember Apple’s flock of birds swooping around, spying on users as they browse the web, a thinly disguised attack on Google’s ongoing Chrome tracking nightmare. Well, despite promises to the contrary ...
Savvy Gamer on MSN
Here's what accepting cookies actually means
When a website asks you to “accept cookies,” it isn't asking permission to hand you a virtual snack. It's asking whether your browser can store small pieces of data that help the site remember ...
The diet app MyFitnessPal must face some privacy claims over its alleged failure to honor web users' request to reject tracking, a federal judge has ruled. The decision, issued Tuesday, marks at least ...
Chrome has finally announced plans to kill third-party cookies. It’s been almost four years since third-party cookies have been disabled in Firefox and Safari, but Google, one of the world’s largest ...
Chrome’s browser competitors Safari and Firefox have both been blocking third-party tracking cookies used by advertisers, by default, for over two years now. Google, the world’s largest advertising ...
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