
As some of you may have heard from recent news, Google has decided to postpone the deprecation of third-party cookies beyond the initially planned date of Q4 2024. The search giant has cited regulators as the reason, with the Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) needing "sufficient time to review all evidence, including results from industry tests."
This marks the third time we've seen an extension to the "death of the cookie" date. However, it is less surprising this time, as the involvement of the CMA and others has increasingly (and justifiably) appeared to slow down the process.
Currently, the CMA is reviewing Google's Privacy Sandbox, the proposed privacy-first browser approach that Google will adopt post-"Cookie Apocalypse." But with parties such as the IAB Tech Lab citing over 40 issues with the proposed solution, we could be in for a lengthy process with an even more drawn-out back-and-forth between Google and regulators.
That being said, and despite the latest delays, the cookie will eventually crumble. Google has been clear about that. So, even though it seems we will have the remainder of this year to benefit from strong, cookie-led open market revenue, Content Ignite recommends the following:
Despite the recent news, Content Ignite will continue to test and learn with new partners and integrate the relevant technology partners into the "Fusion" platform to enable publishers to thrive in a cookieless world.
For more information on Content Ignite's plans and to get an update on Fusion, please get in touch.

For the second year running, Content Ignite found itself shortlisted at the AOP Awards, rubbing shoulders with some of the biggest names in digital publishing.
View Article
Interstitials have a reputation problem. Publishers hear "full-screen ad" and immediately think intrusive, risky, reader-unfriendly. We get it. We've had the same conversation. But here's the thing: that reputation doesn't hold up when you look at what's actually happening on publisher pages right now.
View Article
For independent online publishers, the last few years have felt like a war of attrition. Not only have they been fighting off the relentless pillaging of their content and traffic by increasingly dominant AI platforms and LLMs, they have had to deal with an array of regulators tightening the screws on their ability to operate the traditional Real Time Bidding (RTB) business models.
View ArticleOn 29 April, the UK’s Information Commissioner’s Office (ICO) published its long-awaited final guidance on “Storage and Access Technologies” (SATs), the catch-all for cookies, tracking pixels, device fingerprinting, and the rest of the web’s tracking stack.
View Article.jpg)
We’re proud to announce that Content Ignite has been ranked 353rd in the prestigious FT1000: Europe’s Fastest-Growing Companies 2026 list
View Article
Content Ignite today announced it has joined AgenticAdvertising.org as a Founding Member, supporting the industry’s work to develop and govern the Ad Context Protocol (AdCP) — an open standard designed to enable AI-powered, agentic advertising workflows across the ecosystem.
View ArticleWe only need your email and domain to complete each healthcheck