As long as I can block third-party cookies by default, I'm content to let the website I'm on set whatever it wants. Firefox is moving in the right direction with total isolation, including caches, to prevent Spectre-style timing attacks, and I only hope that Chrome will follow suit.
"Clear cookies on departure" feels like it goes too far -- I do want the ability of the site to remember my login, etc., as a default thing, and once you open that door, they can link any browser identification to whatever they want on the backend; cookies just give an easy way for them to not talk to their own backend, but introduce no new security or privacy issues as far as I'm concerned.
"Clear cookies on departure" feels like it goes too far -- I do want the ability of the site to remember my login, etc., as a default thing, and once you open that door, they can link any browser identification to whatever they want on the backend; cookies just give an easy way for them to not talk to their own backend, but introduce no new security or privacy issues as far as I'm concerned.