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PHOTO: supattra pongsuwan/EyeEm Goodbye, cookies. Hello FLoC? By now, marketers who rely on advertising and targeting through the Google machine likely know about the search giantâs plans for a third-party cookies alternative: the open-source Privacy Sandbox that intends to make cookie-tracking obsolete. It s built on anonymized group-targeting principles vs. individuals. Google calls these groups âFederated Learning of Cohorts,â or FLoC, where brands wonât be able to determine who they are targeting specifically, but will still get to curate relevant advertisements based on the interests of each FLoC. Itâs currently rolled out for about a month now in a developer origin trial in Chrome. ....
PHOTO: Adobe Google has threatened to pull its search engine out of Australia. The threat came as the Australian parliament started pushing through new legislation called the Media Bargaining Code that could change the way Mountain View, Calif.-based Google and other tech companies that depend on digital advertising do business. The principle is straightforward enough. If passed in its current form, it will force Facebook and Google to pay Australian news businesses for content linked to, or featured on their platforms. Digital Platform Power Imbalances It is not the first such attempt to regulate the way content is used by both companies â there have been similar cases in Europe. In this case it goes back to last April when the Australian government asked the Australian Consumer and Competition Commission (the ACCC) to develop a mandatory code of conduct to address bargaining power imbalances between Australian news media businesses and digital platforms, s ....