Commentary

Google Rolls Out Support For AMP In GA4 For All Publishers

Google on Tuesday announced support for accelerated mobile pages (AMP) in Google Analytics 4 (GA4), rolling out to publishers today. 

With the GA4 migration deadline days away, Google has not slowed down the list of updates for the platform.

Google AMP, an open-source technology, allows publishers to create and serve content at much faster speeds across the web. The company says this integration is critical for publishers choosing to use AMP to help continue to track metrics with GA4. 

This integration previously only existed in Universal Analytics, so bringing it to GA4 allows for parity and helps publishers make a seamless transition. 

It’s estimated that 28.1 million websites as of March 2023 use Google Analytics but with only days away from the migration, approximately 11,481,547 live websites as of June 2023, have made the move to Google Analytics 4.

advertisement

advertisement

AMP pages are similar to HTML and load in any browser, but a Google tag, gtag.js, on an AMP page Mobile Pages is not available to use, so a different Analytics tag is provided specifically for AMP.

Google says that user identifiers are randomly generated and stored either in local Storage or cookies.

The ID is reset when the user clears cookies and local storage.

In Google Analytics 4, IP masking is not necessary, since IP addresses are not logged or stored, so by default the AMP tag never logs IP addresses.

To use Analytics on AMP pages, Google requires users to:

  • Disclose how Analytics collects and uses data, and offer users the opportunity to opt-out of Analytics. They can do this by linking to the Google privacy and terms, which includes a link to the Analytics opt-out page.
  • Use the AMP Analytics tag on their mobile pages, and refer to the AMP Analytics spec on Google Developers.
1 comment about "Google Rolls Out Support For AMP In GA4 For All Publishers".
Check to receive email when comments are posted.
  1. Craig Mcdaniel from Sweepstakes Today LLC, June 27, 2023 at 7:03 p.m.

    Laurie, I think it is time for publishers to offer this data for payment. Google might consider this wrong, and they love freebies, the publishers should have the opportunity to receive fair and proper compensation for our data. 

Next story loading loading..