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by teractiveodular 580 days ago
Logged-in Chrome users are tied to Google logins. The mind boggles at the complexity of trying to somehow separate Chrome identities from Google identities, much less explain that to the general populace for whom "Google", "Chrome" and "browse the Internet" are largely interchangeable.
4 comments

No boggling required. If you want to sync your browser state or settings across computers, make a Chrome account. If you don’t, don’t. If you want to use Google, make a Google account.

This is how it should work anyway.

100%. And that’s exactly how the DoJ sees it I believe.
> Logged-in Chrome users are tied to Google logins

Third-party sign in with Google [1].

[1] https://www.google.com/account/about/sign-in-with-google/

We had this for ~20 years. It wasn't mind-boggling complex. On the contrary, it was much simpler: you didn't have to "log in" to a piece of software that ran on a computer you owned under a user account you already logged into.
You don't HAVE to login unless you want to share your passwords, history, bookmarks etc. between your devices. Simpler = not having those features (which most users seemingly find useful).
Except if you logon to gmail it automatically logs you in the browser.
> those features (which most users seemingly find useful)

Do they? I would rather not have a "browser account" and just back up my own bookmarks like I was doing 20 years ago.

> Do they?

Presumably yes. I haven't seen any evidence to the contrary.

> and just back up my own bookmarks

Nothing wrong about that. But again.. most people don't find that to be very convenient (I'd actually bet money that that there are is magnitude or a few times more people using Safari/Chrome/etc. to sync their data automatically instead of doing it manually).

> Presumably yes.

I think presuming people want this is like presuming they want 3rd party tracking cookies or that they want their online footprint profiled by the likes of data brokers and palantir and so on. Uninformed consent is not the same as support. Adult humans are mostly smart enough to change their preferences away from convenience when they understand it has bad consequences.

There is no value to logging into chrome with a Google account that couldn't be replicated easily with some standalone service. The fact they added google logins to Chrome still bugs me.