Slashdot Mirror


Browser Spyware: Watching Where You Linger

An Anonymous Coward writes: "Just when you you'd installed Junkbuster and thought it was safe to go back onto the web, the BBC runs this story which tells you that webshites will soon(?) be able to tell whether you are reading the page, what parts of it are of interest to you, etc. Guess we can expect porn sites to be the first to take advantage of this." Or perhaps someone else is already doing this, and hasn't told you.

11 of 395 comments (clear)

  1. Is it just me or is the web becoming too annoying by smartin · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I wish sites would realize that pissing off their viewers with popups and big honking ads, does not make the viewer more likely to visit the advertisers site or buy their product. It has quite the opposite effect. I've stopped going to some sites that I like for the simple reason that I really F*ing hate popups!

    --
    The difference between Canada and the USA is that in Canada healthcare is a right and gun ownership is a privilege.
  2. Online molesters are targetting OUR KIDS! by BillyGoatThree · · Score: 5, Insightful

    For crying out loud, /., lighten up. Remember back in '95 when you couldn't turn on the TV or read a news magazine without some lame story about online stalking or pedophiles in chatrooms? And we all mocked them by saying "that's no different than real-life, what's all the hullabaloo"?

    "Brick and mortar" stores do exactly this same thing. Many have cameras, the rest use "secret shoppers" (people who look like they are shopping but are really watching YOU) to discourage shoplifting, check competitor prices AND research in-store "migratory patterns". For instance, haven't you ever noticed that ALL grocery stores have the fresh fruits and vegetables right by the door?

    This isn't "Your Rights Online". This is "Translating Nothing Cares About In RealLife Into A Scare Story About 'The Net' In Order To Attract Eyeballs To Slashdot."

    --
    324006
  3. Re:Use smart settings to avoid this: by Grishnakh · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It seems like it'd be a good idea if Konqueror added an option to ignore single-pixel tracking images... should we submit this to bugs.kde.org?

  4. Re:What's so bad about direct marketing? by UberOogie · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Personally, if companies can direct moderate amounts...

    Stop right there, because that's your answer. It will never be moderate. As soon as they can, it is in the marketers best interest to get as much advertising to you as they can in the shortest amount of time, and the more they know, the more they will.

    It is sad, but in the future, we'll probably look back fondly on things like PeoplePC which gave only one advertiser the keys to the car...

    --
    "Enough of this wretched, whining monkey life." -- Marcus Aurelius, _Meditations_, Book 9, 37
  5. Reading the article by daviddennis · · Score: 3, Insightful

    While reading the article, I left the mouse in the main browser window and used the keyboard to scroll. So if their system was used, it would make it appear that I was not reading the article, even though I did in fact read it.

    Really, if you stay on a page for more than a few seconds, you're probably reading it. And that would surely be simple enough to determine, although you'd have to figure out a bulletproof way to put up an invisible frame in order to send the information to the mother ship. It would probably be easiest done in Java, which can do that without pulling up a web page, but many people have non-working Java, so even that's not foolproof.

    Unfortunately for the people who created this model, once people become aware of how it works, it will no longer function. People who would formerly hover the mouse over a link would simply refrain from doing so and therefore give the system no useful data. I also suspect individual personal styles are going to be different enough to stymie them in the end. I am not convinced that people only visit links directly if they have been to the site before, for example.

    For the person who said a scroll mouse would defeat this system, I'm sure signals from the scroll wheel can be read as well.

    When I am hesitating between multiple items, I will often put them in my cart, look at the total and then remove the one that makes the total too high, or that I'm unsure about. Anything I put in my cart and took out, and any abandoned shopping cart contents, would be a ripe selling weapon that can already be used without relying on this technique.

    I think this one's too flaky for practical use. But as always, we'll see.

    D

  6. I don't get this... by update() · · Score: 4, Insightful
    The story is interesting, and but the description of it here seems so far off that I briefly wondered if I'd hit the wrong link.

    Look, since day one of the commercial web, sites have obsessively tracked how many hits they get, where they're coming from, how a user moves through the pages, where they spend time and how often they return. (As if Andover/OSDN isn't doing all of those things -- or is this like with web bugs where we're just supposed to care about them on other sites?) That's one of the great edges the net was going to have over other media. To the degree that people are bothered by that and to the degree that they're technically sophisticated, they turned off cookies and otherwise interfered. And what does Junkbuster have to do with anything?

    What this seems to be is an incremental advance in tracking how pages are read -- there's a little added feedback about mouse movements and maybe scrolling. As always, if this takes off it will be trivial to block for those who know and care about such things. And everyone else has far more important privacy invasion being done to them.

  7. Re:Sinister... by ptgThug · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I was thinking the same thing, how can they do this since web browsing involves stateless, connectoinless technologies.

    So I thought about it, and here is a possiblity:

    If a JavaScript or a Java applet can subtly catch your mouse movements, then they can be imbedded in hidden inputs on the web page. Every link on that page fires off a JavaScript which will submit the form and then redirect you to which ever page you requested. The mouse movement data can only be reported if you select another page.

    In all honesty, paying attention to your actions is the same thing any brick and mortar shop owner can do why watching you walk down the aisles. When stores were smaller and people friendlier, shop owners made it their job to remember your name, your family, and your preferences (The usual, Mr Smith?). What this technology is trying to do is no different than that, it is just not always being done by not-so-friendly people.

  8. Re:Use smart settings to avoid this: by cyberdonny · · Score: 5, Insightful
    have you actually used the web lately? Your ideas are great in theory, but in practice they take you back about 6 years. E-commerce goes out the window w/out cookies. Many sites become unusable w/out javascript (Not just sites that do "onclick=location.href", ...

    Actually, I usually surf with javascript turned off, and the sites where this causes problems can be counted on the fingers of one hand. And for those rare sites I have the choice of

    • not there going again
    • just allowing those sites in my konqueror browser's javascript ACL.
    Of course, if you're in the habit of surfing to porn sites, you might be somewhat more dependant on javascript...

    ...but there are many sites that actually use javascript *well*).

    Actually, using javascript well should mean to not make an obligation out of it, but to use it solely to provide additional and optional functionality. The site should still stay useable even if the user doesn't want or isn't able to use javascript. You know, blind people who are bound to surf using lynx (because their braille lines, or text-to-speech engines only support text browsers) cannot just turn on javascript, even if they wanted!

  9. Re:Use smart settings to avoid this: by mosch · · Score: 5, Insightful
    No, because single pixel gifs have legitimate purposes too. Not to mention the fact that any image can be a "tracking" image.

    Example: Let's say you want to draw a horizontal bar with a rounded edge, ala slashdot. You can make an image that has the rounded edge, then a seperate image that's simply a one pixel gif of the same color, that you then stretch by using height and width attributes on the img tag.

    This will prevent the color differences between the two images, as they'll both be using the same graphics library to display. This however also minimizes download time, because all you really need to make a colored bar is one pixel of the exact color you want.

    Be less paranoid.

  10. Re:Is it just me or is the web becoming too annoyi by iso · · Score: 3, Insightful

    On the topic of pop-ups, I've read through the page you cited, but I still have one more question: does Mozilla have the ability to enable pop-ups only from clicking on a link? Disabling pop-ups entirely is irritating as many genuinly useful sites use pop-ups when a link is clicked. It seems that the Mozilla solution is to add each legitimate site by hand; hardly an optimal solution.

    FWIW, OmniWeb has this feature.

    - j

  11. Re:Is it just me or is the web becoming too annoyi by niteshad · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I hate commercials on TV, but they have to pay for the content. Therefore, I stopped watching, but I don't complain about it - there's no point. Who likes popups? You could use technology to circumvent them, but this is unethical at best.

    Unethical? What about the fact that I'm the one paying to download their advertisement? Since I'm the one paying for my connection to the Internet, and all of the traffic on that connection, I have the right to decide what content is appropriate on that connection. If I decide to block useless ads and popups that's entirely my right.

    In general, I think that companies which try all of these very annoying advertising strategies are ultimately wasting their time and money. They should go read the Cluetrain Manifesto and get a clue.

    --
    To email me,subtract my nick from my email address, starting with the second character. (hint: adto.uiuc.edu is wrong)