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Home›Chrome›That’s why you should stop using Google Chrome if you have an iPhone, iPad, or Mac.

That’s why you should stop using Google Chrome if you have an iPhone, iPad, or Mac.

By Warren B. Obrien
May 25, 2021
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Users of iPhone, iPad and Mac devices should stop using the Google Chrome web browser and switch to Safari, the closed-source browser developed by Apple, according to an article published last week by Forbes.

The reason is that when we use Google Chrome in incognito mode, all the tabs we open join the same single session i.e. there is no separation between the tabs. If you have one incognito tab open and you open another, your private browsing session will continue in the new tab.

“Hidden risk of confidentiality”

To end the session and delete this information, it is necessary to close all tabs in private browsing mode. The magazine notes that this is a “hidden privacy risk” as we tend to open a lot of tabs and keep our browsers open for a long time.

“While third-party ‘cookies’ are blocked by default in incognito mode, third-party ‘iframes’, such as Twitter and Facebook integrations, may, under certain conditions, follow. user trackingSecurity researchers Tomm Mysk and Talal Haj Bakry explained in a YouTube video.

They also state that if the user is logged in, a service can associate referral information in the link with their account, specifying that this will not happen in Safari as this browser provides a separate session for each private window and tab.

Why Safari?

They warn of a virus that impersonates the Chrome app to steal the user's bank details

At the start of last year, Google announced a plan to gradually block third-party tracking cookies in Chrome over a two-year period, but within a second. The video recently posted by Mysk and Haj Bakry is shown to have made no changes so that advertisers can still freely follow users who open web pages in this browser.

“Safari not only blocks third-party ‘cookies’ by default, it also removes source ‘cookies’ from sites that have not been visited for seven days,” the security researchers continue. “Safari processes” cookies ” more carefully than Chrome, ”they add.

On the other hand, Forbes points out that Chrome is preparing a tracking tool called FLoC, which is administered by Google. “This will further differentiate it from Apple, as the nuances of algorithmically categorized users who are identified by common navigation links become apparent,” the text concludes.

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