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Google’s Privacy Sandbox elimination ends the quest for a cookieless Chrome

The news: Google has officially eliminated its Privacy Sandbox and removed the remaining 10 Sandbox technologies that were still available, marking an end to its yearslong plan to pivot away from third-party cookies on Chrome.

  • The decision resulted from “low levels of adoption,” said vice president of Privacy Sandbox Anthony Chavez in a blog post. Google will keep a small number of technologies developed in Privacy Sandbox that have seen higher adoption rates, such as Cookies Having Independent Partitioned State (CHIPS) to store cookies per individual website.
  • Tools being eliminated include IP protection, attribution reporting API for Chrome and Android, private aggregation, and protected audience API.

Zooming out: The move comes nearly 6 months after Google backed away from its third-party cookie replacement initiative after years of preparation for a cookieless Chrome. Privacy Sandbox was delayed multiple times from 2020 to 2024, and faced a string of challenges and criticisms since its debut:

  • The UK’s Information Commissioner’s Office told Google last year that Privacy Sandbox failed to meet data privacy standards, and industry groups have claimed that advertisers “aren’t ready” for the change.
  • Marketers have historically faced challenges implementing Privacy Sandbox. Forty-one percent of mobile app marketers cited Google’s Privacy Sandbox as the challenge with the biggest impact on marketing strategies in March, per Bidease.
  • Marketers largely chafed against the move away from cookies, citing challenges tracking user behaviors across channels (66%), decreased effectiveness of targeted advertising (57%), and difficulties with attribution and measuring marketing (57%), per Supermetrics.

Will there be a cookieless future? With lighter privacy pressures under the Trump administration, it’s unlikely that legislators will push back on Google’s decision to eliminate Privacy Sandbox, marking a notable step back from what has long seemed to be the future of digital marketing.

But some are pushing forward with third-party cookie removal: Browsers like Firefox remain without third-party cookies, and companies like The Trade Desk are providing cookieless alternatives. This indicates that, while a post-cookie future across the board is far from reality, advertisers will still have to reckon with evolving identity solutions and consumers’ increasing hesitation to accept cookies as online privacy shifts to the forefront of consumer concerns.

What marketers can do: Even as giants like Google step away from first-party initiatives, advertisers should prepare for continued change as many are pushing forward with post-cookie ambitions. Cookies may linger for some time to come, but that doesn’t negate broader consumer sentiments that favor data transparency. Advertisers should act now to strengthen their first-party data foundations and test alternative identity solutions.

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