Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Computing
  3. News

Google’s new policy tracks all your devices with no opt-out

Add as a preferred source on Google
View of synced tab groups appearing on an iPad.
Nadeem Sarwar / Digital Trends

Google has begun enforcing new tracking rules across connected devices, such as smartphones, consoles, and smart TVs, as BBC reports. The tech giant once called the fingerprint tracking technique “wrong” in 2019, but has since reintroduced it.

Google has commented that other companies broadly use the data, and it started using it on February 16, 2024. However, that may not sound any better since fingerprinting gathers user data about devices’ hardware and software, which can then uniquely identify a specific device or user.

Recommended Videos

“Privacy campaigners have called Google’s new rules on tracking people online ‘a blatant disregard for user privacy,” BBC News reported this weekend, citing Mozilla’s Martin Thomson warning that “Google has given itself – and the advertising industry it dominates – permission to use a form of tracking that people can’t do much to stop.”

Google also told BBC News that the “privacy-enhancing technologies offer new ways for our partners to succeed on emerging platforms… without compromising on user privacy.” Google first announced the feature in December and caused little backlash, but it is now facing significant pushback. Additionally, the tech giant stated that it was hard to target ads to users when they used conventional data collection on devices such as consoles and TVs because users controlled it with cookie consent.

What is fingerprinting? It is a tracking technique that gathers information about your browser and device to create a profile about you. The collected data is used to target specific ads, and this data allows advertisers to tailor ads based on factors like screen size and language settings. Furthermore, since that information is combined with other data such as battery level, time zone, browser type, and other points, it’s easier to work out who is using the web service.

Judy Sanhz
Computing Writer
Judy Sanhz is a Digital Trends computing writer covering all computing news. Loves all operating systems and devices.
AI wants to summarize it all. TripAdvisor’s misleading reviews show AI will also ruin your travel plans
Spotless, friendly, and totally wrong. AI summaries are hiding the reviews that actually matter.
Tripadvisor logo on MacBook

Planning a trip is stressful enough without wondering if the glowing hotel summary you just read was written by an AI that skipped the scary parts. As it turns out, that might be exactly what's happening on TripAdvisor.

According to an investigation by consumer group Which?, reported by the Guardian, TripAdvisor's AI-generated review summaries are smoothing over serious guest complaints, and in some cases, downright dangerous ones.

Read more
Opera’s new Paste Protect feature stops the clipboard attack your antivirus can’t catch
ClickFix attacks trick you into compromising your own device, and no major browser had a native defense against them until now.
Opera Paste Protect featured

Most online scams are easy enough to spot once you know what to look for. Fake login pages, suspicious attachments, or urgent wire transfer requests are dead giveaways. But ClickFix doesn't look like any of them. It presents itself as a solution, and it asks you to do something so routine that few people think twice about it.

The technique was behind more than 53 percent of malware loader incidents last year, according to cybersecurity firm Huntress, and no major browser had a native defense against it until now. Opera is fixing that with a new feature called Paste Protect.

Read more
Apple’s M6 chip isn’t even here yet, but you’ll see M7 Macs early in 2027
Apple is reportedly already accelerating its next-generation silicon roadmap, even before the M6 has launched.
Apple MacBook

The M6 chip is still expected to debut later this year, but Apple may already be preparing for what comes next. According to Mark Gurman's latest report for Bloomberg, the company is aiming to introduce its first M7-powered devices as early as the first half of 2027, hinting at a much faster silicon refresh than many expected.

M7 could arrive alongside new Macs and iPads

Read more