Hab jetzt den Artikel im Gardian über #Google, die auch im #PrivacyMode tracken, gelesen. Die Frage, wie das gemacht wurde, wurde aber nicht beantwortet. Auch nicht, wie man es festgestellt hat.

Ich habe übrigens eine Freundin mit Glatze. Sie hat immer ein Kopftuch auf. Nur mit ihrem Freund, der auch ne Glatze hat, hat sie ohne Kopftuch geskypt. Danach hat sie Werbung für Haarwuchsmittel angezeigt bekommen. #Microsoft scheint also auch nicht viel besser zu sein.

#Privacy

https://amp.theguardian.com/technology/2023/dec/29/google-lawsuit-settlement-incognito-mode

Google agrees to settle $5bn lawsuit claiming it secretly tracked users

Plaintiffs allege their activity was tracked even when they set Chrome to ‘incognito’ and other browsers to ‘private’ mode

The Guardian

We will also sending our comments to the consultation and you could join #PrivacyMode #NPDWeek to get broader understanding on the subject before sending in your comments. https://hasgeek.com/PrivacyMode/npd-week/

Stay tuned for more updates from #CashlessConsumer on #NPD

NPD Week – Privacy Mode

Debates and discussions on India's Non-Personal Data (NPD) framework

#CashlessConsumer is happy to join #HasGeek's #PrivacyMode #NPDWeek discussing revised draft of non-personal data committee report as well as will be publishing a note on #NPD and #Payments, its significance on consumers of paytech / fintech.

https://hasgeek.com/PrivacyMode/npd-week/ 4/

NPD Week – Privacy Mode

Debates and discussions on India's Non-Personal Data (NPD) framework

@alm10965 Der #PrivacyMode des #Firefox tut in etwa das Gleiche

That spreadsheet is informative.
---
I then looked at the ways browsers implement their own #privacymode.
TL;DR: they're all different.

Do you know what your browser's privacy mode protects you from?

Web features affected:

https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/10kulKoA6b_EWXDjzlg2DXS2vKL1NbW0NvPbcnWo5v0s/edit?usp=sharing
2/5
https://twitter.com/hadleybeeman/status/958736665526329345

Private browsing mode — feature list

Sheet1 Chrome, Chrome, Firefox, Firefox, Safari, Microsoft Edge, Brave, Brave, TOR browser, Opera, Samsung Web feature, Incognito mode, guest mode( and multiple users— user associated with windows), Private Browsing, Tracking protection in private browsing, Private browsing windows, InPrivate...

We also can't write specs for other features of the web platform with normative references on #privacymode.

In other words, we can't currently say "When in #privacymode, this feature should change in $theseWays."

I worry that's a missed opportunity for the web.

5/5 #privacy

I worry that this variety of behaviours makes it hard for users to understand what changes when they flip that switch into #privacymode. It's hard to know what info it's safe to type into which form, for example — if you aren't clear on who might read it.

4/5

I then looked at the ways browsers implement their own #privacymode.
TL;DR: they're all different.

Do you know what your browser's privacy mode protects you from?

Web features affected:

https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/10kulKoA6b_EWXDjzlg2DXS2vKL1NbW0NvPbcnWo5v0s/edit?usp=sharing

2/5

Private browsing mode — feature list

Sheet1 Chrome, Chrome, Firefox, Firefox, Safari, Microsoft Edge, Brave, Brave, TOR browser, Opera, Samsung Web feature, Incognito mode, guest mode( and multiple users— user associated with windows), Private Browsing, Tracking protection in private browsing, Private browsing windows, InPrivate...

I've been doing some research on #privacymode in browsers. (THREAD)

Use cases:
- To protect you from
• the next person to use your browser
• the network snooping
• the site knowing too much about your prior browsing
- For a fresh browsing context (no cookies/fingerprinting)

#privacy