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A 2020 lawsuit put forth by Google account holders resulted in filing of a proposed class action settlement on Monday in a California federal court. The lawsuit accused Google of illegal tracking of users’ activity in Incognito mode. In the filed settlement, Google has therefore declared that it will destroy all the billions of records of web browsing data of its users collected from its private browser.

 

In addition to this, the proposed settlement requires Google to provide greater transparency regarding its data collection processes in Incognito mode and how the company will be putting limits on these processes in the future. Google will also need to de-identify any data that is not entirely deleted. Lastly, Google has also agreed to let users block third-party cookies by default in Incognito mode, so as to prevent tracking on outside websites as they browse privately.

Google Agrees to Destroy User Data Collected in Incognito Mode in a Proposed Settlement



The browser ‘Brave’ that was launched back in 2019, is reported to have been automatically adding VPN services to some users’ computers without their permission.

 

It has been revealed that any time a user has downloaded Brave since 2020, its VPN services, namely Brave VPN and Brave Wireguard, came along with it too, whether the user intentionally wanted it or not. The services are an added, paid integration, which means that they would be active only if a user subscribes to them.

Brave is Reported to Have Been Downloading VPN Services on Users’ Computers without Consent



Google is getting closer to removing third-party cookies by making its Privacy Sandbox APIs generally available by default in Chrome, as a privacy-preserving alternative. The tech giant is expected to phase out third-party cookies by the end of 2024. 

 

As Google expands the availability of Privacy Sandbox APIs to all users over the coming months, it confirms that 3% of Chrome users will remain unaffected during the process.

Google Begins to Roll Out Privacy Sandbox APIs as it Gets Ready to Remove Third Party Cookies Next Year

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