Most of the punctuation marks we know and love have been around for centuries, but can you believe that’s not the case for the wild and whimsical interrobang‽
Invented in 1962, this punctuation mark combines the exclamation mark and the question mark into one fancy
doodad.
Although it’s lesser known than most punctuation types and not often used, it’s a fun trick you can use to convey a question in an excited and energized way.
Google followed through on its resolution to give up cookies.
Well, maybe “give up” is too strong to describe Google’s deprecation of its third-party cookies.
It
stopped tracking 1% of Chrome browser users to display content based on the attributes discovered in that tracking.
Estimates put global Chrome users at 3.2 billion people, so Google just killed off cookie access to about 32 million —that’s more than the population of Texas.
Are you ready for this
Cookiepocalypse? Or in the UK, Biscuitpocalypse?
We’ve asked CMI’s chief strategy advisor, Robert Rose, to crack open this cookie and read the fortune for marketers.