Japan's new antitrust regulations target Apple to allow third-party app stores and web browser engines on iPhones by December 2025. The rules aim to end Apple's ...
Browser company Opera often takes its cue from Mountain View. So, when Google announced in July that it would no longer deprecate third-party cookies in Chrome, the decision could have had ripples all ...
Google is currently in the midst of a major antitrust trial (make that two antitrust trials, actually), which may result in the company being forced to sell off its popular web browser, Google Chrome.
Central to the changes is Apple's WebKit-only rule for all iOS browsers. The new guidelines, translated by Open Web Advocacy, give Apple until December 2025 to remove restrictions that block or hinder ...
A web advocacy group says that iPhone users still get no real web browser choice more than a year after this was supposed to happen under antitrust legislation. The non-profit Open Web Advocacy (OWA) ...
The Open Web Advocacy group claims that despite claiming to allow rival browser engines on the iPhone, Apple has made it impossible for developers to create them. At the end of June 2025, the European ...
This summer, Google conspicuously paused its long-held plans to abolish third-party cookies in its Chrome browser after failing to please a mix of privacy campaigners, regulators, and advertisers. The ...
In a shocking development, Google won’t roll out a new standalone prompt for third-party cookies in Chrome, meaning ad tech companies can still use the targeting technology in the world’s most popular ...