Stanford, Mozilla, Opera Launch Web Privacy Initiative 65
An anonymous reader writes "Stanford Law School has kicked off a 'Cookie Clearinghouse' web privacy initiative that brings together researchers and browsers. The project aims to provide a centralized and trusted repository for whitelist and blacklist data on web tracking, much like StopBadware does for malware. Mozilla and Opera are collaborating on the initiative, and Mozilla plans to integrate it into Firefox's new default third-party cookie blocking. The leader of an advertising trade group has, of course, denounced the participating browsers as 'oligopolies.'"
Re: (Score:1)
Now if only Safari would allow the handling of cookies on a site-by-site basis, like Camino used to. For most sites I want to allow the cookies but have them wiped at the end of the session.
That behaviour works for me, and is only slightly annoying when I encounter one of those clusterfuck websites that want to set lots of cookies.
Re:Microsoft and Apple's stance on this (Score:4, Interesting)
I'm not convinced that's true .. because if you set Safari to block 3rd party cookies, and go to a web site, you still get 3rd party cookies.
So, whatever 'fix' Apple did seems pretty useless to me. Which is why Safari for me is used only to host Facebook -- I don't trust either of them, and if the browser never visits any other sites, there's no other information to be gleaned.
Re: (Score:2)
Definitely! TorBrowsers a great browsing experience and about as anonymous as you can get connecting from home. A couple of things to look for though:
1) Some sites, like Google won't let you. Just use DuckDuckGo instead. Even when using !google bang, it gets past the Google block on the exit relay IP.
2) Don't set yourself up as an exit relay. Really, don't do this! A non-exit relay is safe and helpful from any computer, but you really do not want the computer/IP address you use to be an exit relay. Bad thin
Re: (Score:2)
Not if I don't have Flash installed on my machine it won't. I trust Flash about as much as I trust politicians -- which is to say not at all.
Re: (Score:2)
> There's SuperCookies such as Flash cookies. They track you across browsers.
touch .adobe .adobe .macromedia .macromedia
chmod 000
touch
chmod 000
ll -og .adobe .macromedia .adobe .macromedia
---------- 1 0 Nov 17 2011
---------- 1 0 Nov 17 2011
So much for Flash cookies on linux. A similar approach should work in Windows, depending on which directory Flash cookies are stored there. And many browsers have an option to refuase/allow Flash cookies and/or HTTP5 storage.
Thunderbird Chat and Off the record (Score:2)
https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=779052 [mozilla.org]
https://getsatisfaction.com/mozilla_messaging/topics/otr_support_in_instant_messaging_chat [getsatisfaction.com]
https://getsatisfaction.com/mozilla_messaging/topics/deleting_chat_conversations_or_going_off_the [getsatisfaction.com]
It's about the right to choose (Score:5, Insightful)
“There are billions and billions of dollars and tens of thousands of jobs at stake in this supply chain,” said Rothenberg, who called the browser makers “oligopolies” with excessive power to make decisions affecting the workings of the Internet. “It should be done with stakeholders’ input.”
Mr. Rothenberg, you keep using that word. I do not think that it means what you think it means. The "stakeholders" in this are the users of the browsers, not the web site operators. Get that part right, at least. It is my browser, not the web site operators. If I don't want it to allow me to be tracked through the use of third-party cookies, I should have that choice, just like it's the web site operator's choice to deny me access if I don't allow such tracking. It's all about choice and when it comes to what my browser should or should not do, that choice is mine.
Re:It's about the right to choose (Score:5, Insightful)
And of course there's nothing stopping Rothenberg's bunch of self-entitled wastes of skin from producing their own browser! The AdBrowser could be designed with no blocking of cookies, tracking enabled by default and no blocking of Flash or pop-up windows.
I'm sure it'd be popular.
Re:It's about the right to choose (Score:4, Funny)
TIL: Adblocking in IE is actually BUILT-IN (Score:4, Informative)
See http://superuser.com/questions/257792/how-can-i-block-ads-in-internet-explorer [superuser.com]
Not that I use IE, but I tried that immediately and it works great. No need to install any add-ons, it works right out of the box, you just have to subscribe to one of those lists (like in Adblock+). And the page with those lists is provided by Microsoft!
Re: (Score:2)
What's wrong with reddit?
What isn't?
Re: (Score:3)
It is quite popular. It's called Chrome.
Ad-friendly features include:
-inability to create ad-blocking add-on as good as FF's
-Permanent built-in serial number (http://search.yahoo.com/search?p=google+chrome+serial+number [yahoo.com])
so that killing cookies or super-cookies is pointless.
No word yet on Prism compatibility.
Re: (Score:2)
After being called out on not reading the links I posted, I did some research and it seems Chrome might be safe after all:
ahref=http://news.softpedia.com/news/Google-Chrome-to-Remove-Unique-ID-137535.shtmlrel=url2html-8704 [slashdot.org]http://news.softpedia.com/news/Google-Chrome-to-Remove-Unique-ID-137535.shtml>
Re: (Score:3)
Let's try that Again!
After being called out on not reading the links I posted, I did some research and it seems Chrome might be safe after all:
http://news.softpedia.com/news/Google-Chrome-to-Remove-Unique-ID-137535.shtmlrel=url2html-8704/ [softpedia.com]
Re:It's about the right to choose (Score:4, Informative)
Re:It's about the right to choose (Score:4, Interesting)
He also seems to have trouble telling the difference between the Web and the Internet. Browsers are half the game of the Web, but just more car in a traffic jam of the Internet.
They do have a lot of power when it comes to defining the user experience of the web, but the cool thing about browsers is that it's relatively easy for a programmer (or group thereof) to split off and make their own how they want it, so browser makers have a fair amount of incentive to give users what they want. It won't necessarily be easy, but with all of the major players pushing to follow the standards better, it's probably a lot easier now than it was for Firefox to break on the scene a decade or so ago.
Turning the Tables (Score:3)
Re: (Score:2)
And by rule, you mean trite saying?
Do you honestly think corporations are interested in that? They're interested in maximizing profits, and they don't give a shit about you ... which is why the more we have stuff which blocks these guys, the more we can not need to rely on them to not "screw unto others".
That advertising group? (Score:5, Insightful)
The group in question is the Interactive Advertising Bureau, which is paid to rail against pretty much anything that makes it harder for advertisers to track people online.
I don't want these shitbags tracking my browsing history, which is why I block or otherwise restrict most cookies, and block web bugs. I'm fine though with adverts - just not Randall Rothenberg's view of spying being an acceptable price for free content. Bloody hell, even his name makes him sound like some 19th century mad industrialist, busy earning a fortune from grinding childrens' bones in to cosmetics.
Re:That advertising group? (Score:5, Insightful)
I'm okay with most ads, as long as there's no music/video/flashing/excessive animation/pop-ups/pop-unders/scrolling/etc. I don't mind them tracking me within a site (IE: NewEgg displaying ads for stuff someone from my IP has previously looked at). However, when I see ads for something I looked at on NewEgg popping up on every site I visit, that just feels like stalking. I don't want the Walmart Greeter following me into Target, Sears and Big Lots just so he can keep trying to hand me the Flyer of the Week.
Re: (Score:3)
Good analogy, and these guys seem unwilling to acknowledge how creepy this is! Even though it's anonymised, it's still stalking and building up a little profile of my online activities.
How far does one have to go before Rothenberg considers this to be stalking? Tying to real names? Rothenberg posting his semen soaked toenail clippings through the letterbox of that girl he one day follow on the bus until she reached her home?
strange definition of oligopoly (Score:2)
An oligopoly that between them has around 20% of the market?
Tough ... (Score:5, Informative)
You know what Mr Rothenberg, we don't give a shit.
Because also at stake is our privacy, and our right to not have some douchebag advertising company know every detail of our lives.
I don't want doubleclick, quantserve, google analytics, scorecard research, and all of these other assholes to get a phone-home beacon on every page I visit -- which is why between my firewall and various things like NoScript/ScriptSafe, these sites are blocked.
I don't owe you marketing data, and I'm not interested in your product. Don't act like it's your right for me to provide you this data, because it isn't.
The advertising companies who do this are the oligopolies, Mozilla is just putting some more freedom in the hands of their consumers ... or maybe you don't like it when consumers exercise their right to be not interested in what you're selling and your just a corporate mouthpiece who is only interested in corporate freedom?
I don't have any more sympathy for advertisers than I do for telemarketers. They can both go eat shit and die.
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)
Regarding this universal right you mentioned, can you quote something relevant to back this right up, such as from 'The declaration of human rights' or such?
Oddly enough, article 12 of the UDHR.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Try again?
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:3)
That's a definition specific to clinical psychology. That's like saying trying to tell me that resistors of political change are measured in ohms.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
I withdraw my blasphemous objection. All hail hypo-Google!
Re: (Score:3)
Well, since it involves transmission from MY computer, or pulling down from their servers (again, from MY computer)... until someone tells me I'm legally obliged to allow this to happen, I'm perfectly free to block it. So, I am well within my rights to not participate. It's also my right to tell a telemarketer to fuck off, and to set my phone to block calls with unknown caller id (because if I was supposed to care who you are, you should identify yourself to me).
I'm not interested in their marketing crap,
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Tough ... (Score:5, Insightful)
In theory, they can shove it up their asses.
Until I see a legally binding court decision which compels me to allow this, I'm going to assume my right to tune them out and not listen still holds true.
If a website wants to sue me for blocking their ads, and 3rd party advertiser thinks I'm breaking some kind of law by blocking this, then I will refer them to Arkell v Pressdram [wikipedia.org].
Even if we call advertising 'speech', your right to free speech in no way compels me to listen or enable you to speak to me. I consider advertising to be in the same class the Jehova's Witnesses who come to my door -- your desire to tell me something is trumped by the fact that I Don't Give A Fucking Shit. And like I will shoo these people from my front door, I will continue to block the advertisers and other crap in my browser.
Their desire to be heard doesn't mean I'm required to listen or allow them onto my property.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Unless those terms are prominently displayed on every page (not just tucked away behind a link no one visits) then contract law in UK clearly states that this is an unenforceable extension to the contract as the terms were not made available at the time of accepting it (navigating to a page on the site; i.e. *before* you've even loaded the site)
Not that a Terms of Service page on a web site is a contract in the first place in UK...
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
The copyright terms, yes. Obviously.
Re: (Score:2)
Cookies for session only (Score:1)
As an experiment, I recently tried setting Chrome to keep cookies only for each session (ie delete everything when I close the browser). So far I have not noticed any substantial difference to my browsing experience - all the sites I go to still seem to work normally. It seems like a good compromise - if cookies are disabled completely, lots of sites do not work properly, and do not report why they are not working, and maintaining a manual exception list is a pain.
Re: (Score:2)
I've browsed this way for a long time, and as you said, it works well. I only allow longer-term cookies for sites on which I have an account of some type.
The thing with targeted advertising is that it's still possible, just not as easy. We know that on a Counterstrike website there's little point in advertising training bras, while on an angel healing website there's a burgeoning population of naive marks waiting to buy the next mystical wonder. The biggest loser here would be content mills that are so unfo
Already exists (Score:2, Interesting)
Firefox with ABP (load up the subscriptions, uncheck 'allow some advertising), NoScript (take out all the whitelisted URLs which are there by default) and Ghostery. Add in an extension which forces HTTPS.
Stop visiting sites that make you add any of their shitware scripts to the whitelists in NoScript or Ghostery.
There's a reason advertisers hate, hate, HATE those three plugins. It's because they are like holy water being poured on the foreheads of obese, slovenly vampires which want to devour your persona
Flawed premisses (Score:2)
Not according to the whole way the Internet works. These are two completely unrelated domains. If you wanted the system to work for you, call your images server ima
Can I have... (Score:3, Interesting)
a) A general end to end encryption mechanism, as opposed to the current end to server mechanism. If I send a message to Bob using FaceBook, that is between me and bob, not Bob, Facebook, NSA, CIA, or any other law breaking faction of government that might have the technical means to grab it.
So it should be encrypted with Bob's certs, not Facebooks certs.
b) Thunderbird to support public key exchanges like SSH does. So a public key is attached to outgoing mail, a client that supports it, records that key the first time it sees it, and from then on send to my email are encrypted with that key. i.e. removing the public certificate authority, and relying on the first key exchange to encrypt mail end to end.
c) A HTML extension, declaring an encrypted edit field, with a second extension declaring the recipient. The browser only allows javascript and send to see the encrypted edit text, encrypted with the public key of the recipient (which you obtained on the first key exchange, see a). The edit field needs a visual indicator so we know its encrypted. So webmail can support end to end encryption.
d) An add on to force sites like Yahoo, Hotmail and Gmail into encrypted mode. So we can webmail encrypted even if the site refuses to cooperate.
e) Better control of certificates, I'd like to remove all the cert authorities that have a US base as untrusted (untrustable), but I'm reduced to going through them one by one. Also SSH has warned me in the past of attempts to substitute a certificate, does Firefox do the same?
f) File send data encrypted. People upload zip files with their banking passwords, and other details, thinking they're trusting Google or Yahoo or Dropbox or whatever with a backup copy of their data, not realizing they're handing it to a Dr Strangelove. They should have an easy way to upload it encrypted with their own key.
g) ISPs, can I have the old Deutsch Telekom trick of renewing an IP address every 2am. Making tracking more difficult.
h) ISP's if you're putting in Super NATs can we have them using a session id, and not some constant mechanism that reveals the end point after the NAT.
Excuse me (Score:1)
But how do you get more privacy out of a centralized repository? Centralization and privacy don't mix. And that word... trusted... please...
Since they charge neither users nor advertisers... (Score:2)
Tough tits, toots.
Advertisers are of course, free to create their own extra-spiffy browsers, just chock full of advertising.
Stories of doom and gloom (Score:1)
What happens next? Nothing changes ! (Score:1)
What happens next?
See what we have planned ( click link )
404 — Fancy meeting you here!
Don't panic, we'll get through this together. Let's explore our options here.
Nothing changes LOL
Greetings, slashdotlings (Score:1)