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by yellowapple
2244 days ago
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> Note that ownership of code is not the same of ownership of a service... if Brave is depending on Google services, then you would be right Unless Brave is prepared (i.e. has the necessary staff) to be able to independently develop their Chromium base without any help from Google whatsoever, then they are dependent upon at least one Google service - specifically, Google's development of Chromium. > The whole mantra that data!=privacy is doing a lot of damage No. The whole mantra that "privacy is possible when hoarding data" is what is doing damage. Every byte of data you collect is a liability - a privacy and security compromise waiting to happen. Even assuming your intentions were good and pure (which, as you might guess, I take with a hydrostatically-equilibrious and neighborhood-clearing grain of salt), even locally-stored analytics/performance data is a rich target for less-than-benign actors, and it's information that more often than not has no business being collected. That is: > You can collect data from users and still do not compromise their privacy This is definitionally false. The very collection of data compromises one's privacy, by nature of it having been collected. Sometimes that compromise is necessary, but nothing Cliqz did seemed particularly necessary. |
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> This is definitionally false. The very collection of data compromises one's privacy, by nature of it having been collected.
That's not definitionally false, if it sounds false to you is because you have an implicit assumption that does not apply.
Data from users does not imply user sessions on the collector side (session as a set of multiple data points belonging to the same user).
If sessions are collected, then, privacy is impossible to guarantee. We are well aware of that, having worked on this problems for almost 20 years. But that's precisely what Cliqz never did. All messages from our users are record-unlinkable for us, meaning that we have no way to reconstruct any session.
If you are interested, check the HumanWeb posts on https://0x65.dev/ or the papers https://0x65.dev/pages/dissemination-cliqz.html