Every time you open an email, someone may be watching, because hidden within it could lie a tracking pixel—one of the most potent marketing tools today. When you open an email, it quietly pings the ...
A Rutgers-led study found hospitals that use third-party tracking pixels on their websites were significantly more likely to experience data breaches. Researchers at Rutgers Business School-Newark and ...
On April 14, 2026, the CNIL published its long-awaited recommendation on tracking pixels in emails (Decision No. 2026-042). Tracking pixels are invisible images hosted on remote servers whose display ...
The CNIL treats email tracking pixels as regulated trackers requiring prior consent separate from any general consent requirements for email marketing. Exemptions are narrow, leaving most pixel usage ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results