Forwarded from BlackBox (Security) Archiv
Internet history can be used for โreidentificationโ finds study by Mozilla
A recent research paper has reaffirmed that our internet history can be reliably used to identify us. The research was conducted by Sarah Bird, Ilana Segall, and Martin Lopatka from Mozilla and is titled: Replication: Why We Still Canโt Browse in Peace: On the Uniqueness and Reidentifiability of Web Browsing Histories. The paper was released at the Symposium on Usable Privacy and Security and is a continuation of a 2012 paper that highlighted the same reidentifiability problem.
โผ๏ธ Just your internet history can be used to reidentify you on the internet โผ๏ธ
Using data from 52,000 consenting Firefox users, the researchers were able to identify 48,919 distinct browsing profiles which had 99% uniqueness.
This is especially concerning because internet history is routinely sold by your internet service provider (ISP) and mobile data provider to third party advertising and marketing firms which are demonstrably able to tie a list of sites back to an individual they already have a profile on โ even if the ISP claims to be โanonymizingโ the data being sold. This is a legally sanctioned activity ever since 2017 when Congress voted to get rid of broadband privacy and allow the monetization of this type of data collection.
This type of โhistory-based profilingโ is undoubtedly being used to build ad profiles on internet users around the world. Previous studies have shown that an IP address usually stays static for about a month โ which the researchers noted: โis more than enough time to build reidentifiable browsing profiles.โ
๐ ๐๐ผ (PDF)
https://www.usenix.org/system/files/soups2020-bird.pdf
๐ ๐๐ผ https://www.cozyit.com/internet-history-can-be-used-for-reidentification-finds-study-by-mozilla/
#mozilla #study #research #internet #history #reidentification #thinkabout #pdf
๐ก@cRyPtHoN_INFOSEC_DE
๐ก@cRyPtHoN_INFOSEC_EN
๐ก@BlackBox_Archiv
๐ก@NoGoolag
A recent research paper has reaffirmed that our internet history can be reliably used to identify us. The research was conducted by Sarah Bird, Ilana Segall, and Martin Lopatka from Mozilla and is titled: Replication: Why We Still Canโt Browse in Peace: On the Uniqueness and Reidentifiability of Web Browsing Histories. The paper was released at the Symposium on Usable Privacy and Security and is a continuation of a 2012 paper that highlighted the same reidentifiability problem.
โผ๏ธ Just your internet history can be used to reidentify you on the internet โผ๏ธ
Using data from 52,000 consenting Firefox users, the researchers were able to identify 48,919 distinct browsing profiles which had 99% uniqueness.
This is especially concerning because internet history is routinely sold by your internet service provider (ISP) and mobile data provider to third party advertising and marketing firms which are demonstrably able to tie a list of sites back to an individual they already have a profile on โ even if the ISP claims to be โanonymizingโ the data being sold. This is a legally sanctioned activity ever since 2017 when Congress voted to get rid of broadband privacy and allow the monetization of this type of data collection.
This type of โhistory-based profilingโ is undoubtedly being used to build ad profiles on internet users around the world. Previous studies have shown that an IP address usually stays static for about a month โ which the researchers noted: โis more than enough time to build reidentifiable browsing profiles.โ
๐ ๐๐ผ (PDF)
https://www.usenix.org/system/files/soups2020-bird.pdf
๐ ๐๐ผ https://www.cozyit.com/internet-history-can-be-used-for-reidentification-finds-study-by-mozilla/
#mozilla #study #research #internet #history #reidentification #thinkabout #pdf
๐ก@cRyPtHoN_INFOSEC_DE
๐ก@cRyPtHoN_INFOSEC_EN
๐ก@BlackBox_Archiv
๐ก@NoGoolag