From the Sydney Morning Herald: The Electronic Freedom Foundation have been researching how easy it is to access information about a user’s internet activity. Commonly it is thought that disabling ‘cookies’ is enough to prevent one’s web browser collecting information on what websites are being visited. The EFF’s research implies that even with this safeguard the browser leaves ‘a virtual fingerprint’ which nearly uniquely identifies the user and enables websites to access information on the users browsing habits:
To conduct the research, the website anonymously logged information that most websites would normally access when users visit, the EFF said.
After comparing a database collected from almost a million visitors, the EFF discovered that 84 per cent of the configuration combinations were unique and identifiable, and where browsers had Adobe Flash or Java plug-ins installed they were 94 per cent identifiable.
"Browser fingerprinting is a powerful technique, and fingerprints must be considered alongside cookies and IP addresses when we discuss web privacy and user trackability,"
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