-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 78
New issue
Have a question about this project? Sign up for a free GitHub account to open an issue and contact its maintainers and the community.
By clicking “Sign up for GitHub”, you agree to our terms of service and privacy statement. We’ll occasionally send you account related emails.
Already on GitHub? Sign in to your account
Are you planning to test using Mode A, Mode B, or both? #112
Comments
The Chrome-facilitated testing doc says of Mode B:
Is it correct to infer that we can count on all Sandbox features to be enabled on all Mode B instances, modulo this small holdout/control group? Of course some users may disable using the new privacy UX or sites disable using Permission policy. Will you label the Mode B instances? |
The Chrome-facilitated testing doc says of the features anticipated to ship in Chrome 115,
and later about Mode A,
Will we be able to count on the 10% Mode A cohort labeled by that date having all relevance and measurement APIs enabled? Will any consideration be given to allocating the cohort across mobile versus desktop? |
Same question as above, when should we expect to start seeing cohort labels? Will we see them prior to the test 3p cookie deprecation? |
We plan on participating in both. It would be great if Mode A was to be sent even earlier than Q4 |
Appreciate the comments! We published https://developer.chrome.com/blog/privacy-sandbox-launch/#chrome-facilitated-testing-modes just recently and in there we're now on for providing an update on the testing modes in mid-August. I believe we are still on track for Q4 with the labels, though I'll certainly share the feedback that there's appetite for them sooner rather than later. The labels will definitely be appearing before the one percent cookie deprecation, which is scheduled for Q1. |
@dmdabbs I'll validate both of these, but my initial thinking is:
I think the cohorts are intended to be relatively stable, which means that while the APIs should be available to the entire group, users can still turn them off or on via the controls. I believe the goal is to provide a group where testers can coordinate to not use third-party cookies on a stable population. So in that sense, it would be similar to the population after third-party cookie deprecation, where users still have the option of turning the APIs on or off.
My current understanding is that these groups will be applied evenly across Android and desktop. |
This comment was marked as spam.
This comment was marked as spam.
Closing out as we've ended the Chrome-facilitated testing period. |
See https://developer.chrome.com/docs/privacy-sandbox/chrome-testing/ for details where:
Mode B: Chrome globally disables third-party cookies for some portion of all Chrome users.
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered: