- cross-posted to:
- [email protected]
- cross-posted to:
- [email protected]
What score does your browser(s) get?
I’ll start: I got:
one in ~25000 browsers have the same fingerprint as yours
What score does your browser(s) get?
I’ll start: I got:
one in ~25000 browsers have the same fingerprint as yours
But also
I don’t get it
Almost no browser has the same fingerprint as yours, which makes it nearly unique.
There’s a couple issues going on here. Number one is it’s unique amongst the people who go to EFFs website cover your tracks. That’s not all of the internet users. Hell that’s not even most of the internet users. It’s pretty niche community.
The bits of identifying information are the critical key here. 16 bits, 2 ^ 16… 65,000 different possibilities. Each piece of information you give, makes it a little bit easier to track you. Things like language, time zone… The more bits, the easier it is to identify you. The less bits, the more you blend into the crowd.
This is why multiple people, including myself, have talked about fingerprint.com they’re professional service, who’s targeting websites, who want to track users. So they’re incentivized to track as best as able.
Even if you’ve got a great EFF score, you should always check fingerprint.com, to see if they can track you.
Mine said -
Don’t get it either, just stock FF on stock Android
Stock browsers give a lot of information, supported system fonts, supported system languages, time zone, canvas size, browser window size, there’s a lot of data that leaks out from the browser itself.
Install a weird game that installed a weird font into your system? Well now the entire world can uniquely identify your font combination as you.
Makes sense, thanks!
Though, no idea how that would affect your average Joe so I’ll not worry about it!