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In an agreement released on Monday, Google said it will permanently remove information it secretly gathered when millions of people were searching the internet in "incognito" mode.
Not all Google Maps features are available in the Incognito mode, pretty much because they need access to data about you.
After settling a class action suit over the company's incognito viewing mode in Chrome, Google says it will destroy millions of user search histories.
Google employees cracked jokes about the Chrome browser’s “Incognito mode” and criticized the company for not living up to its users’ expectations for privacy, according to a series of ...
The Incognito Mode class-action lawsuit was initially raised in 2020. To settle the case, Google has agreed to erase its collection of stored data containing details of personal browsing sessions.
Google is updating the warning on Chrome's Incognito mode to make it clear that Google and websites run by other companies can still collect your data in the web browser's semi-private mode.
Google clarifies Chrome’s ‘Incognito Mode’ isn’t as private as you might think A more detailed disclaimer is being rolled out ahead of Google’s $5 billion class action lawsuit settlement.
It seems what we expect of Google Chrome’s Incognito mode and what Google actually does are two different things.
To settle a class-action dispute over Chrome's "Incognito" mode, Google has agreed to delete billions of data records reflecting users' private browsing activities. In a statement provided to Ars ...
Google's Incognito mode was never as private as you may have believed, and now the company is paying the price.
In an agreement released on Monday, Google said it will permanently remove information it secretly gathered when millions of people were searching the internet in "incognito" mode.
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