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        Microsoft Edge API To Support Ads Without Tracking
        
        
        
			- By Kurt Mackie
- March 05, 2024
Microsoft is working on an Ad Selection API to address the impending disuse of third-party cookies in its Edge browser, per a Tuesday  announcement. 
The idea behind the Ad Selection API is to still preserve  ad-supported content, while not permitting cross-site tracking, typically done  via third-party cookies. 
Microsoft Edge Third-Party Cookie Deprecation
Microsoft 's Edge browser "will start experimenting  with deprecating third-party cookies in the coming months, targeting less than  1% of non-managed device users, and continue throughout 2024," per Microsoft's announcement. The testing won't be implemented across managed devices. 
Microsoft Edge will block third-party cookies by default at  some point, the announcement indicated, although the timing wasn't described. 
Meanwhile, Microsoft wants its "commercial customers"  to test their "public and internal sites" regarding the effects of  third-party cookie removal. In the second half of 2024, Microsoft is planning  to " invite testing and adoption of the Ad  Selection API by the industry." 
Microsoft's Tuesday announcement explained that it is  advocating the use of the Ad Selection API as it "enables advertisers and  publishers to show relevant ads to users -- all without relying on third-party  cookies or other cross-site tracking identifiers."
The Ad Selection API is compatible with Google's  Protected Audiences API but it "attempts to strike what we believe is  a more stable long-term balance with content quality and industry innovation,"  according to the Web  Incubator Community Group page description of the Ad Selection API. 
The Ad Selection API differs from the Protected Audiences  API by adding "differential privacy and k-anonymity output gates." It  also avoids "shared services and failure points." Lastly, the Ad  Selection API is said to make "operational excellence" the  responsibility of ad tech.
Cookie Tracking Deprecation Efforts
The idea behind cookies is to preserve state in a  browser session, which can be useful for some browser tasks, such as sharing  profile information across sites. However, present-day uses go beyond such  functionality and track user behaviors across sites, which is known as using "tracking  cookies." 
Microsoft appears to be way behind even Google in efforts to  do away with third-party cookie tracking. Mozilla and Apple have led efforts  and are deprecating third-party cookies this year. They were later joined by Google,  per this  2023 Mozilla developer article. These browser makers are testing the  effects of disabling third-party cookies gradually. They started the experiment  by blocking third-party cookies with 1 percent of users in Q1 2024, for  instance. 
Mozilla already uses an antitracking policy in Firefox that  blocks "third-party cookies from known trackers by default,"  according to The Mozilla developer article. Apple has a similar tracking  prevention policy in Safari. The Brave browser "blocks tracking cookies by  default." Microsoft described having a tracking protection feature in the  Microsoft Edge browser back  in 2019, based on "Disconnect's tracking protection lists."  Microsoft also uses an "engagement score" to not block cookies on sites  where the user is deemed to have an "established relationship."  
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
            
        
        
                
                    About the Author
                    
                
                    
                    Kurt Mackie is senior news producer for 1105 Media's Converge360 group.