• @[email protected]
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    9 days ago

    TL;DR - Google makes (arguably insane) claim that it previously acted responsibly with regards to fingerprinting, and says they will begin acting irresponsibility with fingerprinting in February.

    Practical take-aways you probably already knew:

    • Today’s Google may do or say anything to make an extra nickel.
    • Today’s Google, while it employs some excellent privacy minded engineers, has not demonstrated an organizational commitment to user privacy.
    • It is probably wise to assume that the next serious data breach at Google will end marriages, get politicians arrested, get famous people canceled, fuel successful scammers, and have every other privacy impact you can imagine. We know the Google data pool is massive, and we have reason to believe it is incredibly personal. I’m aware that Google has anonymozation solutions in play, and I do not believe those solutions will be effective in a breach scenario.
    • I believe that the average person will likely be better off ten years from now if they interact less with Google services.
    • @Reddfugee42
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      1099 days ago

      Like Google maps:

      we anonymize your data before selling it. So it leaves your address every morning and goes to your office every morning but it’s completely anonymous.

      • @[email protected]
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        359 days ago

        Exactly. I don’t think I’m alone in feeling that Google’s clever privacy engineering isn’t enough to keep any of us safe.

        Google’s expectation that we be okay with these practices feels like corporate gaslighting, to me.

      • Jolteon
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        38 days ago

        Huh, it’s a good thing there is no way to easily determine who someone is from that information.

    • DankOfAmerica
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      9 days ago

      It is probably wise to assume that the next serious data breach at Google will end marriages, get politicians arrested, get famous people canceled, fuel successful scammers, and have every other privacy impact you can imagine. We know the Google data pool is massive, and we have reason to believe it is incredibly personal. I’m aware that Google has anonymozation solutions in play, and I do not believe those solutions will be effective in a breach scenario.

      That would be an interesting experiment. Maybe cancel culture and public shaming will cease whene everyone realizes no one is perfect and lost people do shitty things from time to time.

      • @douglasg14b
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        38 days ago

        It won’t only a few will be targeted in the media and the same cancerous culture will continue.

    • @[email protected]
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      7 days ago

      To the best of my knowledge - from a spirited but doomed attempt to read Google’s privacy policies - Google is committed to deleting your location history after sharing it with 10,000 or so vendor partners.

      Each of those vendor partners have pinky promised to comply with the rules outlined in the same privacy policy that I failed to read.

      For context, I’m not convinced any living person has read the entirety of Google’s privacy policies.

      Sadly, I’m quite confident - by the law of averages, human nature, and corporate corruption - that not all 10,000 trusted partners also deletes our location data history.

      Google does take privacy preserving steps to anonymyze what it shares.

      My educated opinion is that no amount of attempted anonymozation is sufficient for the breadth, scope and quantity of data that Google collects.

      Shorter answer for you: yes, I believe that is a corporate lie. True only in technicality, but likely false by any reasonable persons expectation of what “delete” means.

      • @[email protected]
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        69 days ago

        For context, I’m not convinced any living person has read the entirety of Google’s privacy policies.

        Their own lawyers, maybe.

        • @[email protected]
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          98 days ago

          Yeah. Their own lawyers have the best chance, but there’s so many pages, combined, I wonder if even one of their lawyers has read everything

  • @[email protected]
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    339 days ago

    What exactly is the change being made? I don’t see that the article actually explains it anywhere.

    • @[email protected]
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      148 days ago

      They are updating their Platforms program policies

      You can read the current version, archived here

      And here’s the proposed changes

      I haven’t read it all, but some glaring changes stand out in regards to fingerprinting (no longer prohibited) and device unique identifiers (no longer prohibited from gathering). Basically, Google wants to become even more lax with how users are tracked by their advertising partners

  • @[email protected]
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    268 days ago

    The worse, it does not only using Google Apps or Services, but more than the half of existing webpages use one or another Google API (at least googleanalytigs and google-tagmanager.which log and spy the visitors and users.

    Hard, very hard to avoid it, Googles eyes are everywhere, even in FOSS.

      • @[email protected]
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        88 days ago

        Yes, you can easily block the tracking crap being downloaded to your HD and added to your browser, almost everyone do it, but you can’t blck the logging of websites which use the Google (mostly) and other APIs. They store your PC and browser data in their server, which you can’t access. The only possibility is using a VPN and other which spoof or fake your data, so that is don’t have a real value. To use a mail which permits to mask your real mail direction, because your mail is an unique identifier which can be tracked all over the web. Using Image share which delete the EXIF data (vgy.me eg., Read always PP to see with which companies are shared your data, and some protections more to patch the worst privacy holes, but forget 100% privacy in the moment you goes online, it’s only a myth to calm the people which intent to stay private with their shitty PC against the tech of the big ones.

      • @techt
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        89 days ago

        Pretty sure Graphene doesn’t do much about fingerprinting on its own, it’s nearly entirely up to the browser. They mention some of their plans to address that with Vanadium, but make no claims as to how effective it is now (at least on the features page).

        • @[email protected]
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          39 days ago

          No google on device no tracking, and I don’t use google services anyhow (with first party clients anyhow). I do have google play services installed but no google account so they don’t have an identity to connect the data they might be able to collect from the phone. Only google service I use is youtube but that’s with third party clients only (FreeTube & NewPipe) over vpn of course.

          • @techt
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            99 days ago

            Right – all privacy-positive methods to employ, but not helpful for fingerprinting. In fact, some things can make you more susceptible to fingerprinting because they make you more unique (like using a custom OS). It’s all about your browser and what it chooses to send with HTTP requests, how it responds to queries for you device/browser specs (via Javacript). Your OS, system architecture, hardware details, browser type and plugins, etc combine to make a very unique profile tied to your device. It’s especially nefarious because all those bits are cross-referenced over all accounts and devices to make a global profile on you. Even if you’ve never used Facebook, you probably have a shadow profile. If you’ve ever logged into the same service or website account on your de-Googled GrapheneOS device as another machine that does have Google services tracking, then your new device is likely already tied to your identity.

            Try this with different browsers – it tests the uniqueness of your device.

  • Matt
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    158 days ago

    Time to root and degoogle for the unfortunate.

  • Brad Boimler
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    139 days ago

    Glad I don’t use any Google services and no apps on graphene OS then for my main computers I run Fedora silverblue with no Google once again.

    • @[email protected]
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      109 days ago

      Yes but do you use PiHole and a solid VPN? Do you spoof your browser’s useragent? Even then, some would argue that you are not safe enough from Google’s prying eyes.

      • @[email protected]
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        9 days ago

        Doesn’t matter, your browser will be fingerprinted with some embedded JavaScript that works in all modern browsers. Detecting VPNs is also trivial.

        • @[email protected]
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          18 days ago

          It doesn’t matter if they detect you’re on a VPN when that VPN is shared by tens of thousands or millions of others. Thats literally the point. It prevents fingerprinting by IP

          • @[email protected]
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            18 days ago

            “User connects via VPN XYZ” is part of the fingerprint. It doesn’t protect you from identifying you, instead it ads to the number of unique properties of your computer and connection, adding to the size of your fingerprint. Besides, a lot of VPNs and proxies add another header x-forwarded-for with your original IP. Source: I worked on multiple e-commerce platforms that use fingerprinting as part of their fraud protection. Also see https://coveryourtracks.eff.org/learn for a more detailed explanation.

            • @[email protected]
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              28 days ago

              Of course it protects you. You can’t use the internet without an IP address. The best IP address is one that’s shared with as many people as possible. That’s why people use VPNs.

              Of course you get a fingerprint. The key is to have a fingerprint thats shared by as many people as possible.