1401
Picture this
(feddit.org)
A place to share screenshots of Microblog posts, whether from Mastodon, tumblr, ~~Twitter~~ X, KBin, Threads or elsewhere.
Created as an evolution of White People Twitter and other tweet-capture subreddits.
Rules:
Related communities:
it would seem like someone's name is the least useful data point
That's the whole thing about browser fingerprinting too. Take the set of internet users who have a particular version of a particular operating system, a particular version of a particular browser, having a particular set of typefaces installed, having a particular language preference, and you'll find yourself in the intersection of all of them.
Remember, kids, it only takes 32 bits to uniquely identify any person on the planet. That's 32 yes or no questions. Of course, they have to be perfectly crafted questions, but identifying power of fingerprinting must not be underestimated.
Clearly we all need to upgrade our personalities to a new 64-bit architecture.
Actually I think the world population is such that you need to add one or two bits.
Ok, fine, 33 bits 😂 Wikipedia says the world population is 8 billion, and python tells me that
math.log2(8e9)
is 32.897.To add to this.
Here’s a website to help you check your own trackability:
https://coveryourtracks.eff.org
It can also help give you advice on how to improve your privacy.
Things that help: (tldr use adblockers but otherwise it’s really about blending into the crowd)
Hard to track: uses Firefox with uBlock origin. Maybe using a popular VPN. Uses an iPhone or a popular model of Android like the Pixel (although Google owning Android/Pixel might mean they get your data anyway…)
Actually very easy to track: uses a niche Chromium-based browser you got from GitHub with niche GitHub project as blockers and a little/known VPN. Uses a niche brand of smartphone with a niche non-Android based OS on it.
That was interesting.
Is there an add-on that changes the header information from an HTTP request to show bogus but common identifying information?
That is crowdsource the most common configurations and set that as the default in the add-on, so now you look like just another face in the crowd.
It’s more than just the header information. The graphics and audio checksum can give away details of what your device is, even if those details don’t match what header information you are sending. That mismatch is itself information they can use.
Brave is the only browser I can actually get a decent score with, too bad it has crypto brainrot
Names actually have a really high collision rate, so for collecting information they're not good. You don't want all the different John Smiths' data clumped together. They're useful once you start sending personalized stuff in though.