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Nine Out of Ten of the Internet's Top Websites Are Leaking Your Data

merbs writes: The vast majority of websites you visit are sending your data to third-party sources, usually without your permission or knowledge. That's not exactly breaking news, but the sheer scale and ubiquity of that leakage might be. Tim Libert, a privacy researcher, has published new peer-reviewed research that sought to quantify all the "privacy compromising mechanisms" on the one million most popular websites worldwide. His conclusion? "Findings indicate that nearly 9 in 10 websites leak user data to parties of which the user is likely unaware."

5 of 133 comments (clear)

  1. All reported on by Holi · · Score: 4, Insightful

    All reported on a site with links to Facebook Pinterest, Twitter, Tumblr, YouTube, and is most definitely using Google Analytics.

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    Sorry, teleporters just kill you and then make a copy. A perfect, soul-less copy.
    1. Re:All reported on by amicusNYCL · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Ghostery blocked the following on motherboard.vice.com:

      Alexa Metrics
      ChartBeat
      Facebook Connect
      Google Ajax Search API
      Google Analytics
      Google+ Platform
      Krux Digital
      Netratings Sitecensus
      Pinterest
      Quantcast
      Sailthru Horizon
      Scorecard Research Beacon
      Twitter Button

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      "Our two-party system is like a bowl of shit looking at itself in a mirror." - Lewis Black
  2. Re:Nine Out of Ten of the Internet's Top Websites. by amicusNYCL · · Score: 4, Informative

    And you think Slashdot doesn't share it for some reason?

    Ghostery is blocking the following on Slashdot:

    Doubleclick (advertising)
    Google Adwords Conversion (advertising)
    Google Analytics
    Janrain
    Scorecard Research Beacon
    Taboola

    It's on Slashdot, and everywhere else.

    Here's a quote from TFA:

    Most troubling is that if you use your browser setting to say 'Do Not Track' me, the explicitly stated policy of nearly all the companies is to flat-out ignore you

    What we need is 9 out of 10 users to start explicitly blocking tracking and advertising, and then flat-out ignore the companies who complain about their bottom line. That article from the advertising industry group talking about how they screwed up rings a little hollow when they are obviously not interested in respecting the requests of consumers to not track them. Enabling Do Not Track is fine, but that only works with the good actors. For everyone else, see below.

    https://www.ghostery.com/
    https://www.ublock.org/
    https://adblockplus.org/

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    "Our two-party system is like a bowl of shit looking at itself in a mirror." - Lewis Black
  3. Re:The very act of being on the internet... by buswolley · · Score: 3, Informative

    https://soylentnews.org/

    Your privacy matters
    Your community matters
    No trackers. Period.
    also note: https

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    A Good Troll is better than a Bad Human.

  4. Re:Nine Out of Ten of the Internet's Top Websites. by gstoddart · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Are you so sure of that? Are you actually taking steps to stop it? Are you verifying it?

    Right now on Slashdot as I type this, there are 12 external domains being referenced, 8 of which want to run scripts. All of them are ad or analytics companies.

    A massive amount of sites have references to the big ad sites (usually multiple), as well as references and/or cookies to social media sites ... which means a lot of ad companies trivially track you across sites, know where you visit, how often, and the pages you're reading.

    Unless you are actively blocking this crap, and unless you're looking at the sites which are being blocked and adding which you've missed ... and clearing any cookies and shit they've added as you go ... you should really assume that these sites are seeing your data even if you don't subscribe to them or realize you're interacting with them.

    You have to be fairly aggressively blocking this shit to believe those companies aren't seeing some of your data.

    And, quite frankly, if you are aggressively blocking this shit, your friends and family are probably tired of you ranting about how fucked up the internet is. I know mine are.

    The problem is so many people don't know this, and even if you try to tell them they don't care.

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