One of Criteo’s proposals to provide more balance in the cookieless targeting and measurement process is to set up an “independent gatekeeper” such as a cloud service provider or SSP to “provide people more control and transparency,” said Blanchard. If parts of the ad operation happen inside the device at the browser level, the data storage and processing demands will be too burdensome and possibly even discriminatory against people with limited data plans, Blanchard said. “Chrome’s proposals remain very much browser-centric, which Criteo has shared in the past our concerns about,” Arnaud Blanchard, senior analytics and product manager at Criteo, told Digiday. But some, including Criteo, are leery of an approach they say has been too centered around the browser. Google’s approach could favor its browser business, say criticsĪd tech firms are participating in the Google sandbox effort. In regards to the Privacy Sandbox investigation, Andrea Coscelli, chief executive of the U.K.’s CMA said in a statement last month the agency “has an open mind and has not reached any conclusions at this stage as to whether or not competition law has been infringed.” He also said that the agency “will continue to engage with Google and other market participants to ensure that both privacy and competition concerns can be addressed as the proposals are developed.” “The Privacy Sandbox has been an open initiative since the beginning and we welcome the CMA’s involvement as we work to develop new proposals to underpin a healthy, ad-supported web without third-party cookies,” said Chetna Bindra, group product manager, user trust and privacy at Google, in a statement. However, ad tech providers and publishers are wary of how open Google actually is to their participation.Ī Google executive defended the firm in light of the CMA investigation. The sandbox project is open to participation from other ad tech firms who can join in through an online forum, the Worldwide Web Consortium. Through its Privacy Sandbox initiative, Google has proposed an evolving collection of ad targeting and measurement methods for replacing third-party cookies. A multi-state antitrust suit filed in December claimed Google uses its “massive information advantage strategically to harm any publisher who refuses to use its intermediaries.” Another recent antitrust suit filed on behalf of publishers claimed that Google’s cookie decision was “exclusionary.” Federal lawmakers also highlighted antitrust concerns over Google’s third-party cookie plans in a 2020 report from the U.S. Google’s decision to disable the third-party cookie has been referenced as examples of anti-competitive behavior in recent antitrust suits against the company, too. By extension, it could compromise publishers’ abilities to make money from online advertising and push people, their data and - along with them - ad dollars further within the walls of Google’s already dominant properties, according to ad tech and publishing executives. The move will effectively disable a primary way that ads are targeted and content is personalized on publishers’ sites. Under pressure from governments and consumers over data privacy infringement concerns, Google a year ago said it will disable third-party cookies by 2022 in its Chrome browser, which is used by more than 60% of the world’s web users.
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