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The marketing impact of the death of third-partycookies To understand how to prepare for this paradigm shift, it’s important to understand the difference between first- and third-partycookies fully. It helps extend the lifetime of first-partycookies, avoiding some impact from ad blockers.
Looking beyond third-partycookies While many publishers are trialling ‘cookie-free’ targeting and measurement solutions in preparation for Google’s stripping of third-partycookies from its Chrome browser next year, these tools often aren’t really cookie-free in the strictest sense.
The UK government earlier this year announced its plans to legislate against the hordes of cookiebanners and pop-ups which are prevalent across the modern web – but it didn’t say exactly how it planned to do this while still getting users’ permission to drop cookies.
Banner Ads This is one of the most common types of display online advertising. Banner ads usually appear on the top, bottom, or sides of a web page. They combine imagery and text to promote products and services, though more advertisers are switching banner ads to video format.
It’s important to note that there are two main types of cookies: First-partycookies and third-partycookies. First-partycookies are created by the website that the user is visiting. Third-partycookies are created by websites other than the one the user is visiting.
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