while I am by no means an expert on this, my gut tells me that this is probably something to do with "nessecary" cookies vs advertising & tracking cookies. its a common loophole for other policies so I wouldnt be surprised if they had some way of circumventing the normal limitations for tracking because of "fraud protection" or the likes.
looking at the cookie descriptors, all of the 1825 day cookies are used to "store &/or access information on device refreshes". the shorter cookies are the only ones that also mention "measuring advertising & content performance".
thank you ๐
I meant that if you look at the "purpose" section of each cookie the ones that are older than 180 days are the only ones that dont mention advertising. thinking they may be related to the "nessecary" or "required" cookies that some websites have. I would presume they have their own or altered version of the other cookies policies since they have different purposes.
apologies, I worded that poorly before.