Google has made significant changes, including the phase-out of third-party cookies and fixing a zero-day exploit in Chrome. This has implications for online advertising, cybersecurity, and technology. GitHub also fixed a high-severity bug that could expose credentials in production containers.
Adios, third-party cookies. As Chrome kicks them to the curb, let’s untangle the web of jargon that’s left behind. This glossary is your quick, no-frills guide to the biggest shake-up in online advertising. Let’s dive in. https://t.co/cqVhHV1nQW
Google began restricting third-party cookies for 1% of Chrome users on January 4th and intends to deprecate cookies for all Chrome users starting from Q3 of this year. The total deprecation of cookies in Chrome is likely to have an appreciable impact on various corners of the… https://t.co/dR80VmhLWy
New year, new Google hacking exploit. The first Chrome zero-day has been confirmed and here's what you need to do right now to protect your data. https://t.co/StS3Y1iaGB
🚨 GitHub fixes high-severity bug (CVE-2024-0200) that could've exposed your credentials in production containers. Your keys have been rotated — Import new ones for commit signing, Actions, Codespaces, or Dependabot. Details here: https://t.co/X89g2ybSCB #cybersecurity #tech
Google fixed the first actively exploited Chrome zero-day of 2024: https://t.co/hLD6X39HRw by Security Affairs #infosec #cybersecurity #technology #news
Between Google’s third-party cookie phase out (finally) and the generative AI boom, there are a lot of changes facing Deena LaMarque Piquion, CMO at the legacy brand @Xerox. https://t.co/VleWdtOuLC