Google to start asking your permission to track you for better ads

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Google wants to expand the way that it uses your data for advertising, but it's asking you for permission first.

Over the next few weeks, all Google users will seea notification popping up in their Gmail or Chrome (or as an app notification) asking if they want to opt into a new type of "ads personalisation."

If you opt into the change, Google could start using information it has about you from its own services like Search, Chrome, and YouTube, to influence the ads that it's showing you across its more than 2 million partners sites and apps, on any smartphone or desktop computer that you're logged in on.

Previously, it haskept data like your search history or YouTube playlists separate from the personalisation it provides when you're browsing websites and apps that use Googleto serve ads.

If you do opt-in, Google says it will be able to show you ads that are more relevant to you and give you better controls.

It's launching a new My Activity pagethat will give more control to people who accept its new policy, by allowing them to control what information it can use for its ads.

So, for example, if you searched for a certain kind of dress but then wanted to stop seeing ads related to it the new Activity Page will let you delete that piece of data on your account across every device. Previously, you would have to shut it down on your laptop and on your smartphone simultaneously.

Here's one of the explanations you'll see from Google:

This is similar to how Facebook recently started using information about people who don't have accountsto show them ads on other websites. That change, however, required users to opt out instead of opting in.

So, what doesthis mean for Google's ads business?Right now, advertisers won't see any changesto how they buy ads. However,by mushing togetherall the data it has on bothmobile and desktopacrossits own sites and partner sites, Google's ads should be better. And whatever company provides advertisersthe most attractive investment will be the one they'll want to pour more money into.

(SOUTH CHINA MORNING POST)