Google’s ultra-long goodbye to third-party cookies — the once unbreakable pillar of web tracking — is inching closer. But their “privacy-friendly” replacement is flawed. Learn how to mitigate the risks and how we are responding in this article.
Correct. Chrome and edge have many many group policy options to mass control fleets of machines. Easily discoverable and configurable. I’m not sure if it is still this way, but Firefox GPO was always janky, and you always ended up needing to resort to a local file for policy stuff that was a pain to manage.
Anyone who uses chrome doesn’t care about their privacy
Which is why it boggles my mind that every company I have worked for uses it as the stock alternative to Edge over Firefox.
The reason is (what I was told) because they don’t have as fine-grained control of Firefox as they have with Chrome on Windows.
Correct. Chrome and edge have many many group policy options to mass control fleets of machines. Easily discoverable and configurable. I’m not sure if it is still this way, but Firefox GPO was always janky, and you always ended up needing to resort to a local file for policy stuff that was a pain to manage.