The death of the cookie has been big news recently. We’ve even written about it in our post, How to Survive the Death of the Cookie.
Google’s January 2020 announcement it would make third-party cookies obsolete in a couple of years only confirmed what we already knew. The cookie was dead.
Or was it?
The death of the third-party cookie is big news to digital marketers. It will affect remarketing and programmatic display ads. But the first party cookie will remain.
This has led to the question, what is the difference between first-party and third-party cookies?
Let’s answer that now.
The first-party cookie works within your website (or domain), passing user information from one page to another. These cookies gather analytics data as you visit a website. They remember your language settings. They also communicate your user data on eCommerce sites, so you don’t have to log in every time you look at an item or add it to your cart.
These cookies aren’t going anywhere (at least not yet).
The third-party cookie passes from one site (or domain) to another. It is not created by the website or domain you are currently visiting. Third-party cookies are available to all websites that load that third-party code.
They are used for ad serving, cross-site tracking, and (as noted) retargeting.
Yes. Second-party cookies involve a data transfer based on a partnership between a company that shares its first-party cookies with another company. These cookies exist beyond the scope of the browser and so are not affected as directly by browsers that block cookies.
There are three main differences between first and third-party cookies.
First party cookies are placed on the publisher’s web server or via JavaScript loaded to the site. The third-party cookie gets loaded by the third-party server using code loaded onto the publisher’s website.
Only the domain that created the first-party cookie can access or track it. Any website that loads the third-party server’s code makes the third-party cookie accessible.
All browsers support first-party cookies. A user can turn them off, but this often results in a poor user experience, i.e., with the individual wondering why the website is broken. (Hint: The problem isn’t the website, it’s your cookie-blocking settings.)
Currently, all browsers support third-party cookies though many have made it a default setting to block them. Google will clearly not support them in the coming years. Users also often block them.
You don’t need to do anything about your use of first-party cookies, other than maybe remind users that allowing them improves site performance.
For third-party cookies, you want to start mining your data. You should also reevaluate your reliance on them. For more ideas and information, you can read our article, How to Survive the Death of the Cookie.