New Chrome Update Will Prevent Sites From Checking For Incognito Mode
Anil
According to Google, the very purpose of this mode should be respected at a high level: maintaining privacy.
- Google's Project Toscana: Elevating Pixel Face Unlock to Rival Apple's Face ID
- Google Offers Voluntary Buyouts to US Employees Amid AI Push
- Google SynthID: Everything You Need to Know About AI Content Detection
The Incognito Mode of Google Chrome hasn’t been shown a good performance as what the company promised lately. There’re some websites that not only check private browsing but also require users to sign in before giving them the ability to read the content. Google considers that as some sort of flaw, so it intends to make everything go in the right way. By using the Chrome 76 release (which is available on July 30th), a “loophole” would be closed as well as being used with its absence in order to recognize a private session. In addition, the tech giant will also change other ways related to Incognito recognization from now on.
According to Google, the very purpose of this mode should be respected at a high level: maintaining privacy. People usually have a lot of serious reasons when using private browsing and staying anonymous. For instance, they don’t want to have any connection with political oppression or abusive sources. Note that even when it’s under certain conditions or not, publishers are avoiding knee-jerk reactions to the new change. Instead, they’d come with more free views for readers or requirement of registration for all their content.
Concerns over the original purpose of private browsing mode might be cooled down a little as a lot of people think such modes are losing some their core value, though it seems to be tough for publishers. Some well-known and prestigious site like the New York Times has already tracked readership along with detecting Incognito Mode and demand people to subscribe. Of course, the fight will continue until Google’s changes are somehow acceptable. In the meantime, the tech giant says those practices actually violate the spirit of private mode. Both sides have their own opinion and interest.
Featured Stories
ICT News - Feb 19, 2026
Escalating Costs for NVIDIA RTX 50 Series GPUs: RTX 5090 Tops $5,000, RTX 5060 Ti...
ICT News - Feb 18, 2026
Google's Project Toscana: Elevating Pixel Face Unlock to Rival Apple's Face ID
Mobile - Feb 16, 2026
Xiaomi Launches Affordable Tracker to Compete with Apple's AirTag
ICT News - Feb 15, 2026
X Platform Poised to Introduce In-App Crypto and Stock Trading Soon
ICT News - Feb 13, 2026
Elon Musk Pivots: SpaceX Prioritizes Lunar Metropolis Over Martian Colony
ICT News - Feb 10, 2026
Discord's Teen Safety Sham: Why This Data Leak Magnet Isn't Worth Your Trust...
ICT News - Feb 09, 2026
PS6 Rumors: Game-Changing Specs Poised to Transform Console Play
ICT News - Feb 08, 2026
Is Elon Musk on the Path to Becoming the World's First Trillionaire?
ICT News - Feb 07, 2026
NVIDIA's Gaming GPU Drought: No New Releases in 2026 as AI Takes Priority
ICT News - Feb 06, 2026
Elon Musk Clarifies: No Starlink Phone in Development at SpaceX
Read More
ICT News- Feb 18, 2026
Google's Project Toscana: Elevating Pixel Face Unlock to Rival Apple's Face ID
As the smartphone landscape evolves, Google's push toward superior face unlock technology underscores its ambition to close the gap with Apple in user security and convenience.
Mobile- Feb 17, 2026
Anticipating the Samsung Galaxy S26 and S26+: Key Rumors and Specs
The Samsung Galaxy S26 series is on the horizon, sparking excitement among tech enthusiasts.
ICT News- Feb 19, 2026
Escalating Costs for NVIDIA RTX 50 Series GPUs: RTX 5090 Tops $5,000, RTX 5060 Ti Closes in on RTX 5070 Pricing
As the RTX 50 series continues to push boundaries in gaming and AI, these price trends raise questions about accessibility for average gamers.