Case Study: Disclosure of Indirect Device Fingerprinting in Privacy Policies

08/21/2019
by   Julissa Milligan, et al.
0

Recent developments in online tracking make it harder for individuals to detect and block trackers. Some sites have deployed indirect tracking methods, which attempt to uniquely identify a device by asking the browser to perform a seemingly-unrelated task. One type of indirect tracking, Canvas fingerprinting, causes the browser to render a graphic recording rendering statistics as a unique identifier. In this work, we observe how indirect device fingerprinting methods are disclosed in privacy policies, and consider whether the disclosures are sufficient to enable website visitors to block the tracking methods. We compare these disclosures to the disclosure of direct fingerprinting methods on the same websites. Our case study analyzes one indirect fingerprinting technique, Canvas fingerprinting. We use an existing automated detector of this fingerprinting technique to conservatively detect its use on Alexa Top 500 websites that cater to United States consumers, and we examine the privacy policies of the resulting 28 websites. Disclosures of indirect fingerprinting vary in specificity. None described the specific methods with enough granularity to know the website used Canvas fingerprinting. Conversely, many sites did provide enough detail about usage of direct fingerprinting methods to allow a website visitor to reliably detect and block those techniques. We conclude that indirect fingerprinting methods are often difficult to detect and are not identified with specificity in privacy policies. This makes indirect fingerprinting more difficult to block, and therefore risks disturbing the tentative armistice between individuals and websites currently in place for direct fingerprinting. This paper illustrates differences in fingerprinting approaches, and explains why technologists, technology lawyers, and policymakers need to appreciate the challenges of indirect fingerprinting.

READ FULL TEXT

page 1

page 2

page 3

page 4

research
07/15/2019

Tracking sex: The implications of widespread sexual data leakage and tracking on porn websites

This paper explores tracking and privacy risks on pornography websites. ...
research
09/01/2021

The Internet with Privacy Policies: Measuring The Web Upon Consent

To protect users' privacy, legislators have regulated the usage of track...
research
10/13/2021

State of Security and Privacy Practices of Top Websites in the East African Community (EAC)

Growth in technology has resulted in the large-scale collection and proc...
research
08/11/2020

Fingerprinting the Fingerprinters: Learning to Detect Browser Fingerprinting Behaviors

Browser fingerprinting is an invasive and opaque stateless tracking tech...
research
09/06/2023

Measuring Website Password Creation Policies At Scale

Researchers have extensively explored how password creation policies inf...
research
08/07/2023

PURL: Safe and Effective Sanitization of Link Decoration

While privacy-focused browsers have taken steps to block third-party coo...
research
04/13/2020

Vaccination strategies on dynamic networks with indirect transmission links and limited contact information

Infectious diseases are still a major global burden for modern society c...

Please sign up or login with your details

Forgot password? Click here to reset