From time to time, important news gets overshadowed by other headlines, even though it could have a profound impact on our (online) world. To most of us, few things are more bothersome than the dreaded cookie banners. On countless websites, you’re confronted with a pesky pop-up urging you to agree to something. You end up consenting without really knowing what it is. If you try to figure out what’s going on, you quickly get lost among the often hundreds of “partners” who want access to your personal data. Even if you do give your consent, it’s questionable whether you truly understand what you’re agreeing to.

    • Brumefey
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      7 days ago

      Yes! You are unique among the 3874720 fingerprints in our entire dataset.

      If the website says that I’m unique in green font, it’s actually bad and should be red, isn’t it ?

    • @dean@discuss.tchncs.de
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      107 days ago

      GDPR is regarding personal data, which includes cookies as well as any other fingerprinting. Even though browser fingerprinting does not persist any data on a device itself, explicit consent must be gathered before it’s used for processing (i.e. tracking) purposes.

    • @Gsus4@mander.xyz
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      107 days ago

      But why unusable, why does a browser have to leak language, window size, time, extensions? Can’t those be spoofed?

        • @Gsus4@mander.xyz
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          67 days ago

          But isn’t most of that client-side processing? Can’t I request a vanilla generic page and once it is in my browser to process it to shape it into the window size and extensions I want? Even if it is an adblocker: serve me the ad, I’ll block it internally. But I suppose that for dynamic pages with js requests this would become hard to do.

                • @skisnow@lemmy.ca
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                  37 days ago

                  You could probably set a cap on how many different fingerprinty attributes a script is allowed to grab before requesting permission from the user.

                • El Barto
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                  27 days ago

                  That is indeed the solution.

                  A technical solution won’t cut it. Here’s a very convoluted example: the <p> tag allows you to send the text “buy illegal drugs here” to kids!! Omg!!! What to do? Remove the <p> tag? Obviously not. You ban the practice.

    • @axEl7fB5@lemmy.cafe
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      47 days ago

      Tor Browser in normal mode is quite usable though, you just can’t use extensions and you need to start a new session whenever you use other websites so they can’t track you via cookies. Mullvad Browser is quite similar too.