@BernardoCF
I think the focus on this particular update is redirect trackers. If you look toward the bottom of the article, you'll see the following paragraph:
This only applies to known trackers; cookies from non-tracking sites are unaffected. Sometimes trackers do more than just track; trackers may also offer services you engage with, such as a search engine or social network. If Firefox cleared cookies for these services we’d end up logging you out of your email or social network every day. To prevent this, we provide a 45 day exception for any trackers that you’ve interacted with directly, so that you can continue to have a good experience on their websites. This means that the sites you visit and interact with regularly will continue to work as expected, while the invisible “redirect” trackers will have their storage regularly cleared. A detailed technical description of our protections is available on MDN.
Some of the key points there:
- It applies only to known trackers as defined and maintained by Disconnect
- The 45 day exception for "any trackers that you've interacted with directly" seems to point to some level of comfort around Adobe Analytics, but more on that below
- The focus is on "redirect trackers" (where, as the article describes, includes those extra hops in the navigation process after clicking on a link from a third-party to your site) and clearing storage related to them every 24 hours
For Adobe Analytics, Disconnect has various Adobe domains and endpoints classified in ways that already result in blocked tracking today. I would encourage you to take a look at the links below to understand more about what Mozilla/Firefox considers a "tracker" and whether or not a domain/resource is blocked: