Third-Party Cookies vs First-Party Cookies
Executive Summary and Article Navigation
Discussion and definitions of:- What is a cookie
- The difference between 1st-party and 3rd-party cookies
- Rejection of 3rd-party cookies
- Effects of blocking / deleting cookies
Who wants a cookie?
What are cookies? Here are a few over-lapping definitions;- A small data file placed on your computer by a website that you visit.
- A piece of code placed in your browser by a website server.
- A text file placed on a hard drive to store and transmit information to the server of websites (re)visited from that browser / computer.
What is a (third-party) cookie?
A cookie is a small bit of text placed on the hard drive of your computer by the server of a website that you visit. The cookie is placed there for the purpose of recognizing your specific browser or remembering information specific to your browser, were you to return to the same site.
All cookies have an owner which tells you who the cookie belongs to. The owner is the domain specified in the cookie.
In “third-party cookie”, the word “party” refers to the domain as specified in the cookie; the website that is placing the cookie. So, for example, if you visit widgets.com and the domain of the cookie placed on your computer is widgets.com, then this is a first-party cookie. If, however, you visit widgets.com and the cookie placed on your computer says stats-for-free.com, then this is a third-party cookie.
Opentracker provides services that allow the companies and websites to track their visitors with first-party cookies.
Growth of third party cookie rejection
Reports and research on the subject of website tracking tell us that the rejection of third-party cookies is growing. Increasing numbers of people are either manually blocking third-party cookies, or deleting them regularly.
That is why Opentracker utilizes 1st party cookie technology.
The cookies being deleted / blocked are third-party party cookies, as opposed to less problematic first-party cookies.
How many people or software tools delete third party cookies? The numbers given can be as high as 40%. If you count that many anti-spyware applications and default privacy settings also block 3rd party cookies, then it is possible that a high percentage of cookies are being blocked.
Blocking and deleting cookies
Why do far fewer people block first-party cookies? It is estimated that a very low percentage of people block first party cookies, less than 5%. The reason for this is primarily that it is very difficult to surf the internet without accepting these cookies. First party cookies are necessary in order for you to be recognised as an individual. Any site that you login to as an individual requires a way of identifying you as “you”. Hotmail, Yahoo, Gmail, online banking, ebay, Amazon, etc.
Additionally, anti-spyware software and privacy settings do not target first-party cookies.
We use cookies to keep track of long-term visitors. These visitors remain anonymous, the point is to be able to see who returns, if and when, for example, for conversion analysis.
We use first party cookies as our first line of analysis, and ip number with user agent as the secondary line. AOL users are identified more specifically because their ip number changes with every click.
What actually happens when cookies are blocked / rejected?
1st party cookies: it is very hard to login anywhere
3rd party cookies: no adverse effects to surfing
Q: How does this affect tracking systems, when people block / delete cookies?
A: All visits will still be recorded, but a person who has deleted the cookies will not be recognised as the same (returning) visitor.
When cookies are in place, and not blocked or deleted, total visitor counts will remain comparatively low. If a person constantly deletes cookies, they will be counted as a new “unique” visitor with every subsequent visit.
Conclusion
In response to these trends, the first step is to find out if the statistics that you collect utilise first-party or third-party cookies. Ask your statistics or tracking company. Asking questions usually leads to more questions, always a good thing when it comes to gathering and analysing data.
Articles & White-papers
- Definitions of Big Data
- Goal-oriented User Behavior
- Third-Party Cookies Vs First-Party Cookies
- Social Media Advertising
- Understanding Big Data
- High Traffic Website Measurement
- Universal search
- “Google search” through traffic
- Populate your CRM
- Web analytics dashboard
- Send report as PDF
- Big Data Orientation
- Show me all Single Girls using my App on an iPhone.
- Use Case – using OT to understand your clients
- New Report added – Custom events
- Updating, Redesigning Or Migrating Your Website Without Losing Analytics
- 1-click User-Tagging
- Complexity and Real-time search
- Tracking via api.opentracker.net
- Why Your Search Terms Don’t Show Up, and What You Can Do About It
- Introduction to Big Data
- Track user logins
- EU Cookie Law Confusion
- Mobile App terminology
- Social Media Advertising
- Drop in traffic conversion
- Improve Google ranking and PageRank
- Paid Adwords & free Google traffic
- 10 Tips To Get Through Tough Financial Times
- Hits or pageviews?
- Pay-per-click advertising and campaign management
- Buying Traffic – PPC Ad campaigns
- Search Engine Optimization
- Online advertising strategies
- Clickstream or clickpath analysis
- Online Privacy Issues
- Buying Traffic – Bulk Clicks
- Using Statistics for Website Management
- Website Market Position
- Tracking vs log analyzers
- How to write a website Privacy Policy
- Access Facebook user profile data with FB Login
- Choosing Search Terms
- Traffic Conversion: Return on Investment (ROI)
- Website Market Worksheet
- You’ve Got Data – PPC Search Terms
- What is Hit, Page, and Web Counters
- w3.org and p3p standard privacy policies
- Bounce Rate and Click-through Rate
- Building Online Community
- Creating web traffic growth
- Third-Party vs First-Party Cookies
- Why do I need a website tracker?
- Web Metrics 101
- Making stats work for you
- How to Buy Traffic
- Queries, Keywords and Search Terms
- Data Analytics In 3 Minutes Or Less
- Increase Your Revenue By 30%
- Leading Innovation through insights
- Why We Need Psychological Research Based On Big Data
- Why Telecommunication Industry Needs Big Data
- Here’s How Companies Use Data Science To Launch Product Campaigns
- Why We Need Psychological Research Based On Big Data
- A Modern Customer Profile Template For Smart Businesses
- 7 Powerful Customer Profile Templates For Your Marketing Campaigns
- User Engagement Metrics
- Email Marketing Statistics of 2020
- Choosing Search Terms
- How to Measure Active Users
- Content Promotion Plan for 2020
- Best Practices in Email Marketing
About us
Quick links
Resources
Contact
support@opentracker.net | |
Opentracker Torenallee 45 - 7.17 5617 BA Eindhoven The Netherlands |