Google is going it alone with its proposed advertising technology to replace third-party cookies. Every major browser that uses the open source Chromium project has declined to use it, and its unclear what that will mean for the future of advertising on the web.
A couple of weeks ago, Google announced it was beginning to test a new ad technology inside Google Chrome called the Federated Learning of Cohorts, or FLoC. It uses an algorithm to look at your browser history and place you in a group of people with similar browsing histories so that advertisers can target you. Its more private than cookies, but its also complicated and has some potential privacy implications of its own if its not implemented right.
Google Chrome is built on an open source project, and so FLoC was implemented as part of that project that other browsers could include. I am not aware of any Chromium-based browser outside of Googles own that will implement it and very aware of many that will refuse.
One note Ill drop here is that I am relieved that nobody else is implementing FLoC right away, because the way FLoC is constructed puts a very big responsibility on a browser maker. If implemented badly, FLoC could leak out sensitive information. Its a complicated technology that does appear to keep you semi-anonymous, but there are enough details to hide dozens of devils.
Anyway, heres Brave: The worst aspect of FLoC is that it materially harms user privacy, under the guise of being privacy-friendly. And heres Vivaldi: We will not support the FLoC API and plan to disable it, no matter how it is implemented. It does not protect privacy and it certainly is not beneficial to users, to unwittingly give away their privacy for the financial gain of Google.
Weve reached out to Opera for comment as well, and heres that companys statement:
As you probably know, Opera has a long history of introducing privacy features that benefit our users: it was the first major browser to introduce built-in ad blocking, browser VPN and other privacy-centric features. The significance now is the end of third party cookies, which will reduce the amount of cross-website tracking on the web. While we and other browsers are discussing new and better privacy-preserving advertising alternatives to cookies including FloC, we have no current plans to enable features like this in the Opera browsers in their current form. Generally speaking, we do, however, think its too early to say in which direction the market will move or what the major browsers will do.
DuckDuckGo isnt thought of as a browser, but it does make browsers for iOS and Android. On desktop, its already made a browser extension for other browsers to block it. And the Electronic Frontier Foundation, which is very much against FLoC, has even made a website to let you know if youre one of the few Chrome users who have been included in Googles early tests.
But maybe the most important Chromium-based browser not made by Google is Microsoft Edge. It is a big test for Googles proposed FLoC technology: if Microsoft isnt going to support it, that would pretty much mean Chrome really will be going it alone with this technology.
In the grand tradition of Congressional tech hearings, I asked Microsoft a yes or no question: does it intend to implement FLoC in Edge? And in the same grand tradition, Microsoft answered:
We believe in a future where the web can provide people with privacy, transparency and control while also supporting responsible business models to create a vibrant, open and diverse ecosystem. Like Google, we support solutions that give users clear consent, and do not bypass consumer choice. Thats also why we do not support solutions that leverage non-consented user identity signals, such as fingerprinting. The industry is on a journey and there will be browser-based proposals that do not need individual user ids and ID-based proposals that are based on consent and first party relationships. We will continue to explore these approaches with the community. Recently, for example, we were pleased to introduce one possible approach, as described in our PARAKEET proposal. This proposal is not the final iteration but is an evolving document.
That is a LOT to unpack, but it sounds very much like a no to me. However, its a no with some important context. But before I get too deep into it, lets talk about a couple of non-Chromium browsers because one important piece of all of this is that Googles FLoC technology is still a proposal. Google is saying it would like to make it a fundamental part of the web, not simply a new feature in its browser.
Heres a statement that a Mozilla spokesperson provided to us on the plans for Firefox:
We are currently evaluating many of the privacy preserving advertising proposals, including those put forward by Google, but have no current plans to implement any of them at this time.
We dont buy into the assumption that the industry needs billions of data points about people, that are collected and shared without their understanding, to serve relevant advertising. That is why weve implemented Enhanced Tracking Protection by default to block more than ten billion trackers a day, and continue to innovate on new ways to protect people who use Firefox.
Advertising and privacy can co-exist. And the advertising industry can operate differently than it has in past years. We look forward to playing a role in finding solutions that build a better web.
As for Apples Safari, I will admit I didnt reach out for comment because at this point its not difficult to guess what the answer will be. Apple, after all, deserves some credit for changing everybodys default views on privacy. However, the story here is actually much more interesting that you might guess at first. John Wilander is a WebKit engineer at Apple who works on Safaris privacy-enhancing Intelligent Tracking Prevention features. He was asked on Twitter whether or not Safari would implement FLoC and heres his reply:
Wilanders reply jibes with Microsofts statement that the industry is on a journey when it comes to balancing new advertising technologies and privacy. But it speaks to something really important: web standards people take their jobs seriously and are seriously committed to the web standards process that creates the open web.
I often make light of that process as being slow, contentious, and frustrating. It is all those things. But its also the last line of defense against the complete and total fracturing of the web into pages that are only compatible with specific web browsers. That isnt the web at all.
And so what youd expect to be a hard no from Apple (and what will almost surely be a hard no in the end) instead becomes a commitment to the web standards process and taking Googles proposals seriously. Ditto from Microsoft.
All of this is happening because every major browser already has or will soon block third-party cookies, the default way of identifying you and tracking you across the web. And every major browser has committed to ensuring that you cant be personally identifiable to third-party advertisers. Even Googles own ad team has said as much.
The end of those cookies is called the Cookiepocalypse, and its apocalyptic because nobody really knows what advertisers will do once those tracking methods are raptured. And so right now, major browser vendors are proposing different, new solutions.
Apple, Google, and Microsoft all have ideas for how advertising on the web should work. Weve discussed Googles FLoC at length, but you might be surprised to hear that Apple isnt just trying to stop all ads; it has privacy-enhancing ad proposals of its own. And that random reference to PARAKEET in Microsofts statement? Another ad proposal.
The problem here is that the Cookiepocalypse is already nigh. Many browsers are already blocking third-party cookies. Google Chrome is the big holdout on blocking third-party cookies, but its also the browser with the biggest market share.
Google has committed to cutting off third-party cookies in 2022, but it seems very unlikely that the web standards process will get to an answer by then. In fact, one of Googles other proposals isnt going to begin testing until late this year far too late to be implemented by the ad industry if Google sticks to its original promise. Who knows what advertisers will do then?
The technology here is complicated, the process is slow, and the outcome is unclear. Thats par for the course for the web. Normally Id tell you not to worry about it and just let the W3C run its course. But the stakes are very high: your privacy, vast pools of money, and the interoperable nature of the web itself could all go up in a puff of smoke if these browser makers dont figure out a way to thread all these needles. Cookiepocalypse, indeed.
Update, 2:15PM ET April 16th: added statement from Opera.
Correction, 6:30PM ET April 16th: Noted that DuckDuckGo does produce browsers for iOS and Android.
Continued here:
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