Chrome's next big update could keep your browsing private without Incognito Mode

Google Chrome
(Image credit: BigTunaOnline / Shutterstock)

Chrome is developing a Privacy Sandbox feature that will prevent tracking cookies from following you between websites – and it's coming soon.

You'll know how it feels to be tracked this way: you spend a few moments browsing products in an online store and for the rest of the day, all the ads you see online are attempting to sell you those very same items.

That's because the store has placed a cookie on your browser that follows you around the web, allowing other sites to present you with targeted advertising.

These third-party cookies are bad news for online privacy, and last year Google announced plans to make them obsolete, pushing developers to use less invasive methods of targeting advertising that don't identify you as an individual.

We're now seeing the first fruits of those efforts, with signs of a new Privacy Sandbox feature in Chrome Canary (an unstable early release intended for developers and anyone who wants to get a peek at features in progress).

As Techdows reports, the Privacy Sandbox is now visible as a Chrome Flag (a switch that allows you to activate experimental features), but it's not yet functional and is currently just a placeholder.

Sandboxing isn't a totally novel feature for web browsers (it's already used in Chrome's Incognito mode, and in Firefox's Private mode and Containers) but Google enabling it as standard could make third-party tracking cookies nearly useless overnight.

It sounds good on the surface, but there's a possibility that this could lead to advertisers employing even more invasive ways to follow you around the web, such as fingerprinting – a technique that builds up a profile of your hardware and software, including installed fonts, apps, choice of browser, preferences and plugins, which makes you uniquely identifiable and is much more difficult to stop.

We'll let you know when the Privacy Sandbox becomes available for testing in Chrome, and if Google announces any plans for how it intends to tackle fingerprinting.

Cat Ellis
Homes Editor

Cat is TechRadar's Homes Editor specializing in kitchen appliances and smart home technology. She's been a tech journalist for 15 years, and is here to help you choose the right devices for your home and do more with them. When not working she's a keen home baker, and makes a pretty mean macaron.

Latest in Chrome
Google Chrome browser icon
A new split-screen feature is coming to Google Chrome, and it's surprisingly powerful
A finger touching the google chrome icon in the Windows 10 start menu
A new Chrome browser highjacking attack could affect billions of users - here's how to fight it
Close-up of Asus Chromebook CM14 ports on left side
Are you an educator or student? Google's new features for Chromebooks and more will make your life way easier
Chrome icon on Android
Google plans on a handy fix for all those duplicate Chrome tabs, but it's only for Android
A trophy with the Chrome logo on it and a star with "2024" written in it
These are the best Chrome Extensions of 2024 – according to Google
Close up of Chromebook
Chrome slowing down your laptop? Google’s new performance controls could help the browser run faster
Latest in News
GTA 5
GTA Online publisher Take-Two is gunning for a black market that’s basically heaven for cheaters
The Discovery+ homepage
Discovery+ just got a big update to its streaming app that makes it more like Max – here are 5 great new features to try
Two Android phones on a green and blue background showing Google Messages
Struggling with slow Google Messages photo transfers? Google says new update will make 'noticeable difference'
Google Meet create custom backgrounds
More AI features are coming to Google Workspace
Elayne, Egwene, and Nynaeve dressed regally and on horseback in The Wheel of Time season 3
'There's a reason why we do it': The Wheel of Time showrunner responds to fans who are still upset over the Prime Video show's plot alterations
A mockup of the possible Apple M3 Ultra logo
Performance isn't the only reason you should buy Apple's M3 Ultra Mac Studio - it's reportedly one of the most power-efficient processors too