Help EFF Test a New Tool To Stop Creepy Online Tracking
An anonymous reader writes "EFF is launching a new extension for Firefox and Chrome called Privacy Badger. Privacy Badger automatically detects and blocks spying ads around the Web, and the invisible trackers that feed information to them. You can try it out today."
Ghostery does a great job of this already... However, the problem with these types of tools is they frequently break some type of (needed) functionality on the site.
7 caught on Slashdot right now.
How's this different or better than adblock / ghostery / flashblock / noscript / do not accept third party cookies ?
Considering the very high rates of red/green colour-blindness, the visual warning is fucking useless. I do not understand how, in a predominantly male industry, programmers don't realise the uselessness of Red Green indicators. Is it so incredibly hard to do blue, red, black? Or some combo that will read for even fray scale colorblindness?
Get the fuck out with your stupid techie misogyny.
If your "guessing" involves generalization to the point of an ugly absurdity, you should check yourself. You make it sound like you have a particular beef, maybe with a particular woman (or women) and now you believe that all bad web code is caused by women. It's a bad place to be.
If you want to say, "I have encountered some young women who fancy themselves graphic designers..." you would at least be on more reasonable ground, but then you need to ask yourself, "Does the fact that this group of people were women really have any impact on my statement?"
Now knock it off. People get skeeved out by misogyny and it's pretty easy to pick up on, so the next time you're looking for a job you might just walk away wondering, "That didn't seem to go well, it's probably because of that woman who interviewed me. They're all whores you know".
You are welcome on my lawn.
you guys are aware that scraping the logs of the webservers also gives you some overview of the usage of the site? Is reverse dns-lookup also considered tracking?
my point: monitoring your own site to make it better is fair use, giving this data to other entities is not.
You mean other than, "Bitches, man, they just don't know how to code, you know? *fistbump*"
You are welcome on my lawn.