Propaganda article - they suggest moving to fucking brave browser. This was shared on the subreddit as well.
The do not track isn’t followed by any websites and can identify you anyway. Yeah good call OP, let’s ditch firefox for fucking brave
Yes it is by at least one famous german website
It looks like GPC spec creates the same sort of tracking signal that DNT did, but it requests less protection: there is specifically a carve-out in GPC that says websites can track you, including for advertising purposes.
GPC is also not intended to limit a first party’s use of personal information within the first-party context (such as a publisher targeting ads to a user on its website based on that user’s previous activity on that same site).
title makes it look like firefox is just removing yet another security feature as part of its enshittification process, but reading the article it looks like it makes sense
- not a lot of websites respect dnt
- it might serve as an identifier, i think
it might serve as an identifier, i think
It does. It’s yet another data point used in fingerprinting, and not many people enable it. 'tis but a single setting, but combined with everything else they can track about your browser it is effective.
In case you want to run a test to see how fingerprinting affects your browser:
The only way to really stop this is to disable JavaScript?
Yes and no. There are still plenty of things that get tracked regardless of JavaScript, and disabling JavaScript is it’s own mark they can track.
Do Not Track is one such request, but screen size, viewport size, language, timezone/region, whether you block ads or not, browser/engine version, and many more are all things that do get tracked without the need for JS.
All have legitimate reasons, but can also be abused by being tracked server-side.The cover your tracks page on eff.org has some pretty good explanations for most things.
Fun fact, the reason the TOR browser launches in windowed mode is so that this viewport size tracking is less of a marker.
“Will Chrome, Edge, and Other Privacy-Focused Browsers follow this move?”
And it’s not The Onion.
Some Websites use Dnt and we know the discussion about cookie banners. We heared arguments that those are necessary to be GDPR conform. There always was the argument to establish, that sites have to respect the state of the art information ‘Do not trackt’ to illiminate the annoying cookie process. Now this Option is gone.
Not so smart.
And being tracked by this header? Simply activated it be default, Mozilla and there are enough users sharing the same configuration.