Being signed in to the browser means the user's account information will be kept by the browser. On all platforms except iOS, the user is automatically signed in to the browser when signed in to Google web services like Gmail. If the policy is set to "Enable browser sign-in," then the user is allowed to sign in to the browser. The user will still be able to sign into and use Google web services like Gmail. On all platforms, their local profile data like bookmarks, passwords etc. On other platforms, they will be signed out the next time they run Google Chrome. On iOS, if the user was signed in and the policy is set to "Disabled" they will be signed out immediately. In this case browser-level features like Google Chrome Sync cannot be used and will be unavailable. If the policy is set to "Disable browser sign-in" then the user cannot sign in to the browser and use account-based services. It allows you to specify if the user can sign in to Google Chrome with their account and use account related services like Google Chrome Sync. This policy controls the sign-in behavior of the browser.
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