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Questioning Google's Privacy Reform

JagsLive makes note of a story questioning whether Google's recent commitment to anonymize IP logs faster is really as good as it sounds. We discussed their announcement a few days ago. CNet's Chris Soghoian takes a closer look: "While the company hasn't said how it de-identifies the cookies, it has revealed in public statements that its IP anonymization technique consists of chopping off the last 8 bits of a user's IP address. As an example, an IP address of a home user could be 173.192.103.121. After 18 months, Google chops this down to 173.192.103.XXX. Since each octet (the numbers between each period of an IP) can contain values from 1-255, Google's anonymization technique allows a user, at most, to hide among 254 other computers. ... Google has now revealed that it will change "some" of the bits of the IP address after 9 months, but less than the eight bits that it masks after the full 18 months. Thus, instead of Google's customers being able to hide among 254 other Internet users, perhaps they'll be able to hide among 64, or 127 other possible IP addresses. By itself, this is a laughable level of anonymity. However, it gets worse."

11 of 134 comments (clear)

  1. Well by mindstrm · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Do all those whining about this anonymize their own server logs? Because I sure don't.... they are doing this to keep the mob away, that's it.

    1. Re:Well by TubeSteak · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Do all those whining about this anonymize their own server logs? Because I sure don't.... they are doing this to keep the mob away, that's it.

      What do our server logs have to do with Google's?

      The principle may be the same, but the scale is so vastly different that the practical consequences cannot be plausibly compared to one another.
      Subpoenaing logs for IP 123.456.789 from Google is not the same as getting logs from icanhascheezburger.

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    2. Re:Well by lysergic.acid · · Score: 4, Insightful

      yea, also i don't think the author of this article understands statistics.

      if Google changes random bits in the IP address even before they remove the last byte at 18 months, that would already make guessing the original IP address near impossible since you don't know which bits were changed.

      if they only changed 1 bit in the entire address, then there would be 32 possibilities, but if they changed 1 bit in each octet, then there would be 4096 possibilities. if they changed 2 bits in each octet, there would be 61,4656 possibilities. if they changed a random number of bits in each IP address, then the possibilities grow even larger. and this isn't a login password or encryption scheme. there's no way to brute-force the original IP address from the anonymized IP address even if only a single bit was changed.

      this is just more unwarranted alarmism. google has stated that they are working on developing a method of anonymization that would protect user privacy while retaining the useful characteristics of their log data. frankly, as long as they're not giving up user data to 3rd parties anonymization is a non-issue.

    3. Re:Well by Silas+is+back · · Score: 5, Funny

      Subpoenaing logs for IP 123.456.789 from Google is not the same as getting logs from icanhascheezburger.

      I'm not sure whether you're qualified to talk about IPs giving this example IP.

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    4. Re:Well by Your.Master · · Score: 4, Insightful

      That's kind of the point. We want to make an informed decision about the costs here.

      Without hearing about "this bullshit", you cannot make an informed decision. Imperfect information damages capitalism; and the more imperfect the information, the more damage is done.

      There's also another aspect. Just about everybody wants everything to be better than it is now. This is a way this could be better. So we ask for it to be better. The argument can be paraphrased as:

      A: Good enough is good enough
      B: Yes, but better would be better.

  2. Who cares about the IP? by compumike · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Everyone makes it much easier than matching IP addresses... As the article discusses, many people use Google logins for e-mail and other services. This is a much more reliable way to track all of your information.

    What I'd like to see is some significant differentiation between logged-in and logged-out states and the level of anonymity that is provided in each case.

    But really, if you're voluntarily storing your stuff on someone else's server with the known understanding that they're parsing it for ad matching, what kind of privacy expectations do you really have?

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    1. Re:Who cares about the IP? by TubeSteak · · Score: 4, Informative

      What I'd like to see is some significant differentiation between logged-in and logged-out states and the level of anonymity that is provided in each case.

      There's no difference.
      Google sets a tracking cookie.
      That cookie gets tied to your current IP.
      If you log in, that gets tied to your login name.
      Logging out doesn't undo the log entry saying IP 127.0.0.1 = cookie 34kl5j2345 = compumike@gmail.com

      The spread of google-analytics makes avoiding their tracking cookie all the harder.

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      [Fuck Beta]
      o0t!
  3. Uh huh, yeah, whatever. by Creepy+Crawler · · Score: 5, Informative

    Dont trust anybody what they say about your "privacy".

    Install Firefox 3, AdBlock+, noscript, and torbutton.

    You want complete anonymity, click torbutton (you have to set up tor). You're now damned hidden. No cookie leaks and stuff;.

    --
  4. Why does Google risk customer relations? by wandm · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I don't get it. I'm sure I'm not the only one looking for a good Google substitute, and the number of skeptics will just grow, unless Google gets it privacy protection act together. It's just a matter of time that another AOL-type leak happens.

    In the internet age, companies' luck can change quite quickly. Please Google, just get rid of those logs quickly and completely..

  5. Tor is not a solution either by speedtux · · Score: 5, Insightful

    except, of course, that with Tor, the egress routers can (and probably do) look at your unencrypted communications, which often can be traced back to you, too.

    If you want reasonable anonymity, you need to buy VPN access from a source using a non-traceable payment method. And, of course, they can still correlate your online activity on various sites. A single unencrypted Yahoo Mail or GMail session will unlock your entire usage history.

  6. Re:Hide by Anti_Climax · · Score: 5, Funny

    If you're using google services from IPv6, it's even easier to figure out who you are.

    I mean, it's either you or the other guy...

    --
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