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by propogandist
2077 days ago
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this will limit your solution from many deployments. Knowing returning visitors from first time visitors is quite important and helps to asssess if viewership, audience and customer base is growing over time. For startups the "how many unique visitors do you get in a month" may be an important KPI and you're saying your solution cannot answer this question, so another solution will be needed to be deployed. Unique visitor data's also needed to assess effectiveness of campaigns and run e-commerce operations. There's often campaigns to bring back a user who previously didn't buy (email, ads etc). It's important to measure the effectiveness of these investments separately in web analytics given the campaigns will be different for new and recurring visitors. |
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There will always be value to be extracted from the invasion of your users' privacy, but you also hit diminishing returns over this increasingly invasive probing. Plausible is aiming for "good enough" whilst respecting people's privacy, and that is a good compromise IMHO.
There is a trade-off. You will never get 100% of the information without all the tracking, but there is information that represents more bang for the privacy buck.
Would you not have a acceptable error increase in your decisions with a bit less information and a lot less privacy invasion?
EDIT> I think more control to the user is better, so instead of canvas fingerprinting, shady cross-site tracking and all, I would rather have a uuid that my browser informed, but that I controlled, so I could be anonymous when I want to and be tracked when I don't care, or when I genuinely agrees it adds value.