That's one good reason to use privoxy or the like, to turn all cookies
into session-only by default, if your browser doesn't have a similar
feature or the controls aren't fine enough to do that in general but turn
it off, allowing saved cookies, for some sites. Konqueror has the option
but it's set globally, and kills existing cookies one might want to keep,
for a few sites, so I don't use it, but use privoxy instead. One
remaining problem is that privoxy, unlike the proxomitron I formerly used
on MS which used the SSLeay libs to intercept secure connections if set to
do so as well, simply bypasses secure connections, so be aware that any
secure connection can still set saved cookies even if you have privoxy set
to session-only cookies. Still, that would allow one to use Google
services with secure logins if desired (I'm still suspicious and haven't
needed to, so don't), while using privoxy to block standard ad use of the
same cookies.
I believe I was reading about a Firefox cookie switcher extension as well.
It let you switch cookie profiles, so you can browse with Google (for
example) cookies disabled most of the time, but switch profiles, enabling
a saved cookie, them when needed. As I said I don't tend to use Google
login services so I've not needed something like this and passed it up,
preferring cookiesafe's per-site approach. I'm not sure how they'd work
together nor do I remember what the name of the cookie profile switcher
extension was, but I do remember seeing it.
That said, the general problem you refer to, that of huge conglomerates
such as google expanding into more and more areas and gaining more and
more power over our lives and privacy, and the greedy noses of the US and
other governments on top of that, still exist, regardless of the measures
individual users may take.
Duncan