Google Wants To Use People’s Browser History To Target Them With Ads

If you’re tired of censorship and dystopian threats against civil liberties, subscribe to Reclaim The Net. It appears the omnipresent tech titan Google is turning to its users’ browsing history to accentuate its ad strategies. With the successive deployment of “Enhanced Ad Privacy” across its Chrome user base, Google’s professed aim of tailoring advertisements to individual users’ interests and online interactions may well be masking profound implications for users’ privacy. The modest notification box announcing this transformative functionality has been rearing its head since the July release of Chrome 115, signaling the incorporation of Google’s Topics API. The discerning user, however, may perceive this as just another turn of the screw on privacy. But the caveat here lies not so much in the announcement as in the fine print that stipulates agreement acceptance and targeting based on regional regulations. Critics contend that by allowing websites to mine users’ browsing histories to further Google’s advertising cause is tantamount to the erosion of personal privacy. A small fraction of Chrome’s colossal user base is now enveloped in the new regime, embroiled in the Topics API modus operandi where voluntary and perfunctory acceptance is indistinguishable. Conversely, Google maintains that its impending cessation of third-party cookie support and resort to alternative technologies like the Topics API will balance the exigencies of ad targeting and user privacy deftly. In effect, Chrome can lend a direct ear to users’ specific interests via its Topics JavaScript API, forging a path for advertisers to pitch their wares accordingly….Google Wants To Use People’s Browser History To Target Them With Ads