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by skuhn
1186 days ago
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OHTTP does require that the parties don't collude, which is why Google has engaged Fastly to run the relay service (which knows end user identifying data) and are themselves running the gateway service (which knows the end user request body). Part of the contract terms include not delivering log data to Google for this service, among other things that help ensure that this separation of knowledge is upheld. |
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Second, as I said in another comment, I'm not a chrome user and I'm asking more for personal entertainment. However, I think that I'm asking questions that everyone not in the space would ask looking from the outside. Hopefully, your answers are of use for someone else.
Third, my personal biased opinion is that this will not resolve any of the issues surrounding Google and the online tracking. I lost my personal trust in Google many years ago and things haven't change since then. Even this initiative which is supposed to underpin the privacy and the choice of the user is provided as a corporate project with Google choosing who decides on the allowed urls, the ohp provider, and everything else about the parameters of the "deal". As I said, I cannot comment on the cryptography, but anything else in the whole story does not provide me with the confidence that the user choice has been uphold as a value. I doubt that anyone will have their opinion change from all of this.
Possible measures which could've demonstrated some transparency could've been if Google wasn't the only authority on the allow list, if people could choose the ohp provider, if the authority was granted to a ngo with transparent rules and decision taking process, and independent oversight...
Thanks though and good luck.