On Librewolf i got 16.48 bits of information, on TOR browser 10.32 bits, but on Tails I managed to get only 9.3 bits.
With Vivaldi
Didn’t know Vivaldi had this capability, I just used it because it was the only decent browser with an on/off sidebar till zen
Not only the sidebar, you can tweak almost everything to your like.
Best methods to lower the score on android? I tested multiple browsers on EFF. 17 bits regardless of browser.
17.47 on mobile Vivaldi.
What would be considered a high score on this? Is 16 too high?
16.47 on Cromite. But most of the identify information is not even true, almost everything is spoofed. User agent, timezone, operating system, browser name, screen size and color depth, device, even the battery percentage
Does this spoofing change with every page you visit? If so that’s really neat!
screen size, system time, color depth, battery percentage does
Your browser fingerprint appears to be unique among the 183,996 tested in the past 45 days.
:(
It constantly gives me 17.5 bits on several browsers firefox, nyxt, gnu icecat, librewolf…
Number of bits can also depend on your UI scaling, resolution and timezone.
Am I wrong to assume trying to blend in is a worse and contradictory strategy than trying to actively protect yourself from tracking?
If you want to not be unique, use default setting chrome without adblock. Your browser will look just like anybody else’s, but they will literally know who you are.
On the opposite side of the spectrum, you lock everything down and spike as a very special browser and… that’s all they know.
Privacy vs. anonymity
Not what I meant: https://github.com/arkenfox/user.js/wiki/3.3-Overrides-[To-RFP-or-Not]#-fingerprinting
"If you do nothing on desktop, you are already uniquely identifiable - screen, window and font metrics alone are probably enough - add timezone name, preferred languages, and several dozen other metrics and it is game over. Here is a link to the results of a study done in 2016 showing a 99.24% unique hit rate (and that is excluding IP addresses).
Changing a few prefs from default is not going to make you “more unique” - there is no such thing."
Basically making yourself less unique is impossible so there’s no sensible tradeoff to be made (other than in the context of Tor and Mullvad Browser).
Right. The question is whether they can attach what they know to an identity. Depends on your threat model which goal you need to achieve.
But then they can know a lot more since they don’t even need to drop a cookie to track you. But that’s a different threat model.
13
I get 8.44 bits (1 in 347.34 browsers). I use Firefox with Arkenfox user.js applied on top, with some of my own custom overrides.
However, I think the biggest factor could be because I have Ublock Origin set to medium-hard mode (block 1st party scripts, 3rd party scripts and 3rd party iframes by default on all websites), so the lack of JavaScript heavily affects what non-whitelisted websites can track. I did whitelist 1st-party scripts on the main domain for this test (coveryourtracks.eff.org), but all the ‘tracker’ site redirects stay off the whitelist.
I actually had to allow Ublock Origin to temporarily visit the tracker sites for the test to properly finish–otherwise it gives me a big warning that I’m about to visit a domain on the filter list.
Within our dataset of several hundred thousand visitors tested in the past 45 days, only one in 91389.5 browsers have the same fingerprint as yours.
Currently, we estimate that your browser has a fingerprint that conveys 16.48 bits of identifying information
Doesn’t look good. How do you make it so that your browser doesn’t have a fingerprint at all?
Close it.
You can’t not have a finger print. You can a best try and look like everyone elses.Sadly the free market won’t care and as such you won’t blend with normal users. Still you can try and look like ever one else in the privacy community
It seems like the characteristics of my Android tablet doom me here - I was unique even using Chrome.
I appreciate the site, but what score is considered good or bad? A cool stat would be some kind of score compared to everyone else.
12.67 from Safari/iPhone, without changing any settings. This is my most commonly used browser
I’m unique :) this ain’t great
its ok if your fingerprint changes on every browser startup
…as long as you are blocking tracking cookies, and aren’t on a session with a website that’s tracking you.
Otherwise, you just have a nice unique hash in your cookies. A password manager could help here.
A password manager? Could you explain why?
Cookies and other ways of keeping a session upright are kept by the browser. So unless you’re mad enough to copy cookies between devices, they prove you’re on the same device.
Using a password every time you log in, and letting your browser wipe everything on shutdown does not show websites wether you’re on yhe same or another device.
@Boomkop3 @broken_chatbot Do you mean not keeping browser history actually makes big difference? I do that for few years but wasn’t sure how much it really helped.
That does not matter, cookies and other local web storage can though
@Boomkop3 I mean full erase on shutdown, like in private window.