The New York Times is suing Madwell, the Brooklyn-based indie ad agency that has come under mounting financial distress after a dramatic legal fallout between its cofounders and what multiple current and ex-staffers describe as reckless spending by CEO Chris Sojka.
The complaint, which has been reviewed in part by ADWEEK, alleges that the agency owes the news publisher $37,176.38 plus interest for unpaid debts due for advertising services provided to Madwell or its “employees, agents, or representatives.”
The sum “has not been provided although duly demanded” by the New York Times, the complaint, filed in Brooklyn’s Kings County Supreme Court, alleges.
A spokesperson for the New York Times confirmed the lawsuit, but declined to comment further.
Google 将保留 cookie 并回溯其退出计划
Google will keep third-party cookies on Chrome and abandon its previously publicized plans to introduce an opt-out mechanism that would have allowed users to choose not to be tracked by the technology, the company announced in a blog post on April 22.
The tech giant will keep with its “current approach to offering users third-party cookie choice in Chrome,” wrote Anthony Chavez, vice president of Privacy Sandbox, “and will not be rolling out a new standalone prompt for third-party cookies.”
Google will allow users to manage their cookie preferences in their Chrome settings, backtracking on plans it announced last July to roll out a privacy prompt enabling seamless user opt-outs.
This previous plan was publicized as part of the company’s decision to issue an indefinite pause on its yearslong plans to deprecate third-party cookies on Chrome. Prior to that move, Google had postponed its cookie phaseout multiple times since 2020.
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