Digital Times Nigeria
  • Home
  • Telecoms
    • Broadband
  • Business
    • Banking
    • Finance
  • Editorial
    • Opinion
    • Big Story
  • TechExtra
    • Fintech
    • Innovation
  • Interview
  • Media
    • Social
    • Broadcasting
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Trending
  • ROXETTES MOTORS Confirms Optimal Performance Of EV Charging Stations In Abia State
  • Volunteers Drive Nationwide Cleanup As Sterling One Foundation Rallies Partners For Environmental Action
  • Nigeria Positions Itself As Digital Frontier With U.S. Partnership – Inuwa
  • Enugu Tech Fest 2026: TD Africa Champions Practical Innovation As Headline Sponsor
  • Uganda Cuts Internet Access Ahead Of Elections
  • PalmPay, Premier Cool Unveil “10k For 10k Campaign” To Reward 10,000 Nigerians With ₦100 Million
  • MultiChoice Nigeria Names Kemi Omotosho New CEO
  • LG Electronics Expands Its Lifestyle TV Lineup With The New Art-Inspired Gallery TV
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Digital Times NigeriaDigital Times Nigeria
  • Home
  • Telecoms
    • Broadband
  • Business
    • Banking
    • Finance
  • Editorial
    • Opinion
    • Big Story
  • TechExtra
    • Fintech
    • Innovation
  • Interview
  • Media
    • Social
    • Broadcasting
Digital Times Nigeria
Home » Google To Stop Sale Of Ads Based On Tracked Individual Browsing History
TechExtra

Google To Stop Sale Of Ads Based On Tracked Individual Browsing History

DigitalTimesNGBy DigitalTimesNG3 March 2021No Comments3 Mins Read1 Views
Facebook Twitter Pinterest Telegram LinkedIn Tumblr WhatsApp Email
Google
Google head office
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Telegram Email WhatsApp

Google on Wednesday said it will stop selling ads based on a person’s individual browsing across websites, a move that could shake up the digital advertising industry as consumers call for more privacy online, according to a CNET report.

Last year, the search giant said it will phase out third-party cookies, little bits of code that can let advertisers track user history across the web.

Once those are gone from Google’s Chrome browser next year, the company made it clear that it won’t use or invest in alternate tracking tech that could identify people at an individual level.

“If digital advertising doesn’t evolve to address the growing concerns people have about their privacy and how their personal identity is being used, we risk the future of the free and open web,” David Temkin, a Google product manager focused on privacy, said in a blog post.

“People shouldn’t have to accept being tracked across the web in order to get the benefits of relevant advertising.”

The announcement comes as Google’s search and targeted advertising business are under increasing attack by lawmakers as well as state and federal prosecutors.

The tech giant faces three major antitrust lawsuits, including a landmark case by the US Department of Justice, and another complaint by a bipartisan coalition of states.

Wednesday’s announcement is part of the search giant’s push toward a “privacy sandbox,” which is designed to let publishers target ads based on people’s interests without infringing on their privacy.

The company has touted breakthroughs in AI like “federated learning,” which relies on Google’s systems getting smarter by using raw data on people’s devices, instead of transferring it to the cloud, so Google doesn’t actually see the information, but still learns from it.

READ ALSO  Invest Africa, Google, KPMG, Others Partner To Lift African Entrepreneurs

Google’s declaration to not use alternative tracking technologies is sure to ruffle others in the ad tech industry that plan to replace third-party cookies with other software that can closely track individuals, like one method that uses people’s email addresses.

“We don’t believe these solutions will meet rising consumer expectations for privacy, nor will they stand up to rapidly evolving regulatory restrictions, and therefore aren’t a sustainable long term investment,” Temkin said.

Still, there’s a catch to Google’s update. The changes won’t apply to “first party” data, which companies collect directly from consumers.

That includes Google’s own products, like Gmail, YouTube and Chrome. The changes will also only apply to websites and not mobile phones.

#Ads #Individual Browsing History Google
Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Previous ArticleTry Your Luck! Japanese Billionaire Looking For 8 Lucky Passengers For Moon Voyage
Next Article Google Unveils Flutter 2.0 To Target Developers Across All Platforms
DigitalTimesNG
  • X (Twitter)

Related Posts

Enugu Tech Fest 2026: TD Africa Champions Practical Innovation As Headline Sponsor

14 January 2026

Anambra Unveils AI-Powered SmartGov Platform, BETA, Deepens Leadership In Digital Governance

17 December 2025

Forward Edge Consulting Launches Cyber1000 To Bridge Africa’s Cybersecurity Skills Gap

16 December 2025

CyberSafe Foundation, Google.org Launch Resilio Africa To Boost Cybersecurity Resilience Across Sub-Saharan Africa

16 December 2025

Optimus AI Labs Unveils Next-Generation AI Support Services For Nigeria’s Financial Sector

8 December 2025

Nigeria Faces Unprecedented Cyber Onslaught As Attacks Surge Tenfold- esentry Q3 Report Reveals

3 December 2025

Comments are closed.

Categories
About
About

Digital Times Nigeria (www.digitaltimesng.com) is an online technology publication of Digital Times Media Services.

Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Latest Posts

ROXETTES MOTORS Confirms Optimal Performance Of EV Charging Stations In Abia State

14 January 2026

Volunteers Drive Nationwide Cleanup As Sterling One Foundation Rallies Partners For Environmental Action

14 January 2026

Nigeria Positions Itself As Digital Frontier With U.S. Partnership – Inuwa

14 January 2026
Popular Posts

Building Explainable AI (XAI) Dashboards For Non-Technical Stakeholders

2 May 2022

Building Ethical AI Starts With People: How Gabriel Ayodele Is Engineering Trust Through Mentorship

8 January 2024

Gabriel Tosin Ayodele: Leading AI-Powered Innovation In Web3

8 November 2022
© 2026 Digital Times NG.
  • Advert Rate
  • Terms of Use
  • Advertisement
  • Private Policy
  • Contact Us

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.