[tor-bugs] #5501 [TorBrowserButton]: enable Do-Not-Track DNT by default
Tor Bug Tracker & Wiki
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Thu Mar 29 01:16:56 UTC 2012
#5501: enable Do-Not-Track DNT by default
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Reporter: cypherpunks | Owner: mikeperry
Type: enhancement | Status: new
Priority: normal | Milestone:
Component: TorBrowserButton | Version:
Keywords: | Parent:
Points: | Actualpoints:
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Comment(by cypherpunks):
Replying to [comment:1 mikeperry]:
> Alright, Mr/Ms/Mrs. Flamebait McTroll, I'm putting my h8r hat on..
You've been warned.
I am not a hater. This is not so fatal. You turn it on or not. No matter.
I continue to use your browser.
> DNT is not just a statement. It's a regulatory nightmare waiting to
happen, and what it means depends upon user behavior, website features,
and a whole lot of site-specific user consent.
>
> For example, as a site operator, what the hell does DNT mean if a user
logs into your site? You have to track them minimally, if only to provide
functionality and security...
For example, for google mail it would mean: "Do not scan their mails. Do
not offer personalized advertisements. Use generic advertisements.".
> If we can't solve privacy preferences with technological solutions that
prevent data disclosure in the first place, we're not trying hard enough.
We try the technological and the political way at the same time. DNT is a
political statement.
Replying to [comment:2 mikeperry]:
> That said, I am all about stopgaps. If you can convince me DNT actually
makes practical difference, we'll think about turning it on.
Right now it's too new. It doesn't make a difference right now. It's a
signal. Not using the signal is like not going to election, "my voice is
insignificant".
While normal users turning on DNT can be tracked even better due to DNT,
Tor is significant and can send a signal (all Tor users share it).
> Who cares? What can this thing actually mean in any practical sense? If
I log into facebook/gmail and send a bunch of messages to all of my
friends' public walls/email lists with DNT set, what does that mean?
For facebook it means similar "Do not scan my messages. No personalized
ads."
> In the worst case it means facebook/gmail says "Sorry, you can't do
that, you don't want to be tracked." Then the user is forced to disable
the header globally (and incur the fingerprinting penalty globally), just
to use a site-specific service.
That is great! Imagine all the protests, people quitting facebook and
facebook offering better privacy, less tracking.
And if something like that ever happens and it worsens the user
experience, you can deactivate DNT in a further release. Releases are
quite frequently anyway. And also this would be actually good press. "DNT
failed. Torproject decided to disable DNT because too many websites
rejected users who have DNT enabled. Privacy, what's that anyway? The
thing they cared about in the 19th century? Self regulation failed.
Stronger privacy laws needed."
> Moreover, what would the header buy us that
https://www.torproject.org/projects/torbrowser/design/#DesignRequirements
doesn't cover?
It adds and political statement, which is more likely to be counted, than
counting how many people have Tor IP's.
--
Ticket URL: <https://trac.torproject.org/projects/tor/ticket/5501#comment:5>
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