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Google Has Quietly Dropped Ban On Personally Identifiable Web Tracking (propublica.org)

Fudge Factor 3000 writes: Google has quietly changed its privacy policy to allow it to associate web tracking, which is supposed to remain anonymous, with personally identifiable user data. This completely reneges its promise to keep a wall between ad tracking and personally identifiable user data, further eroding one's anonymity on the internet. Google's priorities are clear. All they care about is monetizing user information to rake in the big dollars from ad revenue. Think twice before you purchase the premium priced Google Pixel. Google is getting added value from you as its product without giving you part of the revenue it is generating through tracking through lower prices. The crossed-out section in its privacy policy, which discusses the separation of information as mentioned above, has been followed with this statement: "Depending on your account settings, your activity on other sites and apps may be associated with your personal information in order to improve Google's services and the ads delivered by Google." ProPublica reports: "The change is enabled by default for new Google accounts. Existing users were prompted to opt-in to the change this summer. The practical result of the change is that the DoubleClick ads that follow people around on the web may now be customized to them based on your name and other information Google knows about you. It also means that Google could now, if it wished to, build a complete portrait of a user by name, based on everything they write in email, every website they visit and the searches they conduct. The move is a sea change for Google and a further blow to the online ad industry's longstanding contention that web tracking is mostly anonymous. In recent years, Facebook, offline data brokers and others have increasingly sought to combine their troves of web tracking data with people's real names. But until this summer, Google held the line." You can choose to opt in or out of the personalized ads here.

6 of 155 comments (clear)

  1. Thank but no thank you by Artem+S.+Tashkinov · · Score: 5, Informative

    I knew this day would be coming a long time ago so there's a very elegant solution to this madness.

    1) Use a separate IMAP/POP3 client (thunderbird is nice) to fetch your mail from Gmail
    2) Make your Firefox clean your session data on exit (cookies, web cache, offline website data - that's enough)
    3) Adbock+/Ublock Origin with anti tracking and anti social lists for good measure

    This still leaves your IP address unprotected but if you're concerned enough, use a provide which generates random IP addresses or VPN.

    1. Re: Thank but no thank you by Artem+S.+Tashkinov · · Score: 4, Informative

      Countless websites on the internet totally break if you block google IPs.

    2. Re:Thank but no thank you by Artem+S.+Tashkinov · · Score: 4, Informative

      Numerous: 1) You can set thunderbird to only show text by default (so no HTML/JS/etc madness, no ads, no nothing, except what's absolutely necessary) 2) Your cookies are not shared with your web browser 3) Less chance to enter your Google password somewhere where it doesn't belong (various scam websites/DNS injection/etc) Oh, and make sure you use OAuth authentication in Thunderbird - but at least the first initial connection must be made with real Google servers ;-) It will protect you against rogue SSL certificates/MITM attacks.

  2. Not enough people care by rmdingler · · Score: 4, Informative
    By and large, this opens up a larger revenue stream for Google with very little backlash from their users.

    It will be cussed and discussed on a few noble forums and everyone else will go on with their Facebook world, surrendering personal privacy for access to social media and the Google search engine.

    --
    Happiness in intelligent people is the rarest thing I know.

    Ernest Hemingway

  3. Re:The data economy. by Artem+S.+Tashkinov · · Score: 1, Informative

    free Internet services

    Google is number one ad selling platform on the Internet. They are also number one search engine with no competitors in sight (bing is pretty useless for anything peculiar/professional/serious, yandex' cache is very small, baidu is only meant for Chinese). They are raking in cash even without selling users' data.

    It's the "greed" economy, not "data" economy.

  4. Re: "Don't be evil" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative

    I use fastmail, you pay money, they provide email. Nice simple relationship