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by moron4hire
1921 days ago
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The threshold of information needed to gain reliable fingerprintability is so low that we could rewind the browser development clock 20 years and still be nearly 100% identifiable. We'd gain nothing in terms of privacy, but we'd lose everything in terms of the first and only application platform that runs on every system short of a greeting card, is free to use, easy to use, not tied to an app store, not tied to a single vendor. |
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Other types of programs don't have that problem. If you get some code from Github, you can review it yourself before the first time you run it. Then every time after that, it's still the same code so you only have to do it once. And you can have someone you trust do it for you, like a Debian package maintainer.
But with nobody reviewing the code, the machine has to do it, i.e. there have to be a bunch of technical constraints on tracking and malicious behavior.
It's a terrible rubbish fire that we don't have any kind of real application platform for real applications that runs the same on every system and doesn't have a monopolist dictating terms. We should fix that. But we could fix that, and be better off than by giving up and conceding the world to surveillance dystopia.