Context: The digital world of cookies plays a significant role in any online experience.
What are Cookies?
- Cookies are text files containing small snippets of information such as login details to identify computer when connected to the internet.
- They are used to identify and improve web browsing experience by allowing them to identify specific users.
- For Example: Platforms like Facebook and Google use cookies to track online behavior, ensuring the ads you encounter align with your preferences.
- India’s newly enacted Digital Personal Data Protection Act 2023 now necessitates websites to acquire explicit consent from users prior to collecting or processing their personal data via cookies.
Uses
- Helps in Authentication: Cookies act as digital ID cards, aiding in user authentication by allowing websites to recognise and keep you logged in during your visit.
- Personalization Experience: They foster a sense of personalisation, recalling one’s preferences such as language choice or website theme.
- Analytics: Theyfacilitate website owners in gathering invaluable analytics data about user interactions, enabling them to make enhancements and customize content.
- Marketing: They play a pivotal role in targeted advertising, as advertisers use them to display ads that align with your interests and browsing history, making online shopping more enticing.
Associated Challenges
- Privacy Concerns: Privacy concerns arise as cookies could track online behavior, which, while often harmless, can sometimes encroach upon digital privacy.
- Security risks: Security risks loom when cookies are inadequately secured, opening doors for cybercriminals to pilfer one’s personal information.
- Third-party cookies have sparked debates, prompting many web browsers to curb their usage to safeguard user privacy.
- Sluggish Web Experience: The data deluge generated by the multitude of cookies can potentially clog your browser, leading to a sluggish web experience.