One On One Interviews

Raju Vegesna of Zoho: Transforming from Tech into Ad Company Puts Strain on Customer Trust

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Synopsis

When Google announced at the beginning of the year they will be phasing out the use of third-party cookies in their Chrome browser it provoked a strong reaction in a couple of ways. Some saw it as a nod to improving customer data privacy, as cookies allow companies to track where you go on the web and create opportunities for marketers to “stalk” you with ads wherever you go. And marketers who worried about not being able to stalk you wherever you go on the web. And it’s those dueling positions – customer privacy vs marketers need to market - that is proving difficult to phase out those cookies, as Google announced a nearly two year delay in their cookie phase-out plans last week. The delay seems to be brought on by a hesitancy of some websites and tech companies to implement the tech Google is experimenting with as a cookie replacement - based on the Federated Learning of Cohorts (FLoC) approach. This is supposed to provide a level of abstracting individual user information by creating groups of people