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Google's new privacy policy goes into effect on March 1. Here's how to make sure your Google search data doesn't get swept up in the mix.
March 1 is the day Google's new unified privacy policy goes into effect, which means your Google Web History will be shared among all of the Google products you use.
If you'd like to delete your Google Web history and change your settings before the company's March 1 shift, the EFF has a quick step-by-step explaining how to do it.
Google users can now download their entire Web search history to a desktop, according to instructions posted on the company's support site.
Google Web History archives everything you've searched for (while signed in to your Google account), and gives you a bookmarklet to bookmark sites you like. The whole idea is to make the browsing ...
Google will used collected information on your search habits beginning March 1, but here’s how to delete your search history before then.
Google's Search History feature, which was switched on as a default option for many Google searchers in February, has now been renamed Web History to ...
Starting March 1, Google is unifying its privacy policies to share the data it collects about users between all of its products. That means your web ...
The feature, which Google introduced in January, was unearthed by Alex Chitu of the unofficial Google Operating System blog. To download your search history, you will need to go to Google Web ...
The end is nigh! For about 59 different Google ToS documents at least. After today, the new consolidated privacy policy will go into effect on March 1st, which will also consolidate much of your ...
Jacques Mattheij wrote a blog post named Google Web/Search History Disable Does Absolutely Nothing. Basically claiming that when you hit that delete button, Google just hides it from your Google ...
March 1 is the day Google's new unified privacy policy goes into effect, which means your Google Web History will be shared among all of the Google products you use.