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3 future-proofing strategies for Google’s third-party cookie crackdown

Martech

After four years of anticipation, Google officially began restricting third-party cookies for 1% of Chrome users (about 30 million people) this January. This move lays the groundwork for a broader third-party cookie phaseout in the second half of 2024.

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UK Shifts to Opt-Out Model for Cookie Consent

VideoWeek

The UK government earlier this year announced its plans to legislate against the hordes of cookie banners 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. A big change of course?

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The cookieless mobile world: how advertisers can stay competitive

illumin

Marketers are gearing up for the cookieless mobile era. The digital media scene has had a shake-up since 2024 began. Essentially, going “cookieless” means you are no longer capturing data identifying individual users through third-party cookies. There are two variations: first-party cookies and third-party cookies.

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Digiday+ Research: A guide to the top 10 ID alternatives for publishers

Digiday

Identity technologies are the backbone of programmatic advertising, which has been dependent on tracking user data and third-party cookies for decades. In fact, most non-premium publishers depend on ad targeting through third-party cookies for over 80% of their ad revenue. How the data stacks up. What does it do?

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Different Types of Online Advertising to Increase Brand Awareness

Single Grain

Pop-up Ads As the name suggests, these ads pop up on a screen and include a call-to-action. The CTA varies, depending on the online advertising goal; they can either compel users to sign up for a service or newsletter, learn about a product or brand, or purchase products.

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23 Digital Marketing Trends You Can’t Ignore in 2024

Single Grain

What this means is that someone could use a prompt that asks Bard to come up with a list of the best restaurants in their area, and Bard will generate a list of what it deems to be the most qualifying restaurants for that list: As Google frames it, Bard is not equivalent to a search engine, but rather it’s “ a complement to Google Search. ”

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