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Google exempts its own websites from Chrome's automatic data-scrubbing feature, allowing the ads giant to potentially track you even when you've told it not to.
Programmer Jeff Johnson noticed the unusual behavior, and this month documented the issue with screenshots. In his assessment of the situation, he noted that if you set up Chrome, on desktop at least, to automatically delete all cookies and so-called site data when you quit the browser, it deletes it all as expected – except your site data for Google.com and YouTube.com.
While cookies are typically used to identify you and store some of your online preferences when visiting websites, site data is on another level: it includes, among other things, a storage database in which a site can store personal information about you, on your computer, that can be accessed again by the site the next time you visit. Thus, while your Google and YouTube cookies may be wiped by Chrome, their site data remains on your computer...
Google exempts its own websites from Chrome's automatic data-scrubbing feature
Google Play has booted a third-party app for BitChute, one of the most popular free speech focused YouTube alternatives, from its app store as part of another contentious crackdown on an alt-tech competitor.
The app was created by Hexagod and had over 100,000 downloads before it was removed. Google cited violations of its “Webviews and Affiliate Spam policy” as the reason for taking the app down.
Specifically, Google claimed the app was in violation of the rules because its “primary purpose is to drive affiliate traffic to a website or provide a webview of a website without permission from the website owner or administrator.”
But BitChute has disputed this characterization and tweeted: “Contrary to the message below there was never any affiliate deal and permission was given.”
Entrusting your data to big tech platforms can be highly risky.
Users who have been banned by Google for supposedly violating its terms of service have been left without access to key parts of their lives.
Many have appealed the suspensions but have received automated responses.
They don't know why they've been banned. "This is just how life is when you're dealing with trillion-dollar faceless corporations," said Aral Balkan.
When he received the notification from Google he couldn't quite believe it.
Cleroth, a game developer who asked not to use his real name, woke up to see a message that all his Google accounts were disabled due to "serious violation of Google policies."
His first reaction was that something must have malfunctioned on his phone.
Then he went to his computer and opened up Chrome, Google's internet browser. He was signed out. He tried to access Gmail, his main email account, which was also locked.
"Everything was disconnected," he told Business Insider. ...
He feels anger, too. "I'm extremely angry at Google for just completely locking me out or deleting all my data without a single notice, losing money, data on personal projects, contacts, so much," he explained.
The lack of transparency about how he broke their terms of service also has him worried. "I keep thinking there has to be a reason they've suspended me, even though it could just be some algorithmic glitch or something.," he said. "It's difficult to shake this feeling, given that Google practically has mountains of data on me.
"I'm also angry at myself for not having even thought of the possibility I could lose my Google account with everything in it and accounts linked through Google," he added. "Apparently I'm not alone in this blind faith though. Hopefully that changes."
"I'm extremely angry at Google for just completely locking me out or deleting all my data without a single notice, losing money, data on personal projects, contacts, so much," he explained.
Google does provide you with incognito mode in chrome to handle this.
Google targets companies to sell GSuite, it's one of their biggest products outside of search. GSuite is basically email/documents/etc...
Why are you turning over every bit of data entered on https://california.ballottrax.net/voter/ to Google?
I'm a javascript programmer. This is not merely a security hole, it's outright betrayal of the public interest:
script src="https://www.google.com/recaptcha/api.js?onload=onloadcallback&render=explicit"
Any javascript included on a page can read everything the user enters on that page, track every keystroke, every mouse movement.
Please, stop this crime.
Patrick Killelea
Menlo Park, CA
p@patrick.net
Google via the recapcha shit js
Is it just me or has Google's search algorithm gone to shit?
Use www.yandex.com
Duckduckgo is completely separate from Google I believe. Nothing at all in common, and they don't like each other.
richwicks sayswww.duckduck.go (wrapper for google...
Is it really?
Eric Holder saysrichwicks sayswww.duckduck.go (wrapper for google...
Is it really?
I think it is.
I believe it started out as a wrapper for a GROUP of search engines. Used to be pretty lousy but it's improved beyond the point of google. Google will actually remove sites entirely now.
how does it compare to bitchute?
FortWayneAsNancyPelosiHaircut sayshow does it compare to bitchute?
Less bigfoot/illuminati crap.
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To view my work calendar on my phone i have to add that account, so google knows my phone now too.
Even viewing a youtube video at work i noticed that they have me logged in to youtube (which google owns). if i log out, i can't read my email...
Google is the worst thing ever to happen to privacy.