Sean R. Lynch ☑️ is a user on literati.org. You can follow them or interact with them if you have an account anywhere in the fediverse. If you don't, you can sign up here.

Mozilla has a petition asking Facebook to stop tracking people's browsing off the site unless they opt in to it. Frankly I think the solution is to remove the ability to track people across sites from the web entirely, but I signed the petition anyway. Facebook has taken a huge hit to their reputation, so now is a good time to be putting pressure on them to change their ways.

foundation.mozilla.org/campaig

@seanl Technically, how could this capability be removed?

@woozle So far it's been primarily through tools like Privacy Badger and Multi-Account Containers. Privacy Badger at least should come with the browser and be on by default. It's essentially what Apple's now building in to Safari (the Privacy Badger functionality at least).

Tracking needs to be opt-in. Europe's "We use cookies, opt in or fuck off" is utterly worthless. We need laws against non-opt-in tracking, not laws forcing web sites to tell people meaningless things.

@seanl So, basically kluges -- not really a rigorous limitation?

Sean R. Lynch ☑️ @seanl

@woozle In terms of the technical capabilities that exist right now, yes, it's basically kludges. Unless you're going to start turning off first-party cookies by default. Browsers could gradually force publishers toward a web where using cookies or other client-side state for things that break functionality for non-logged-in people drives enough people away that they decide it's not worth it. That doesn't stop IP tracking, but NAT and IPv6 privacy extensions make that at best a heuristic.

@woozle It would help a LOT if the #1 browser weren't developed by a company whose entire business is violating people's privacy. Chrome needs to be liberated from Google or destroyed.