How identifiable are you on the net?

I'm sure we're all aware that the browser we use (the User Agent in internet-speak) reports back information to each web server we visit. But could a web server gain any information about who we are just from the browser? Could we be identified when we visit later on? You might think: easy, just turn off cookies and we'd be pretty much unidentifiable, but is that the case?

I tried out a web site called Panopticlick put up by the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) to see how identifiable I was (or, if you like, how unique my browser fingerprint is). I got back:

Your browser fingerprint appears to be unique among the 139,433 tested so far.

Currently, we estimate that your browser has a fingerprint that conveys at least 17.09 bits of identifying information.

Yikes!

The information that is gathered and analyzed for uniqueness is the User Agent string, the HTTP_ACCEPT headers, the browser plug-ins, time zone, screen size and color depth, the system fonts, whether cookies are enabled, and the "Limited supercookie test", whatever that is. The things that are most unique for me are my list of plug-ins and my fonts. In essence, those are unique amongst the data they currently have collected in their database. The EFF have gathered some recommendations to mitigate against browser fingerprinting here.

Go on, try yours, I dare you...

Posted via email from Julian's posterous


Posts on similar topics...

2 Responses

  • Fri 29 Jan 2010
  • 12:20 AM
  •  avatar #1

Thorsten said...

"Within our dataset of several hundred thousand visitors, only one in 7,661 browsers have the same fingerprint as yours.

Currently, we estimate that your browser has a fingerprint that conveys 12.9 bits of identifying information."

But that's mainly because everything except User Agent and HTTP_ACCEPT Headers just says "no javascript" (who in their right mind is browsing the web without having NoScript installed?).

If I DO allow javascript, then yes I also get a "appears to be unique" rating. Interestingly, blocking cookies from eff.org makes my browser more unique: "only one in 58,789 browsers have the same fingerprint as yours".

What the test doesn't properly show is that while I am allowing cookies from all sites that are not explicitly on a blacklist, they are all only allowed as session cookies except if the site is on a special whitelist, which prevents cookies from begin used to track me across session limits.

  • Fri 29 Jan 2010
  • 2:42 AM
  •  avatar #2

Anders Isaksson said...

When I switched on "Start private browsing" in FireFox 3.5.7 the fingerprint dropped from 17.67 to 16.43 - one full bit of entropy! Not much more privacy in that...

Leave a Response

Some MarkDown is allowed, but HTML is not. (Click to learn more.)

  • Emphasize with italics: surround word with underscores _emphasis_
  • Emphasize strongly: surround word with double-asterisks **strong**
  • Inline code: surround text with backticks `IEnumerable`
  • Unordered list: start each line with an asterisk, space * an item
  • Ordered list: start each line with a digit, period, space 1. an item
  • Insert code block: start each line with four spaces
  • Insert blockquote: start each line with right-angle-bracket, space > Now is the time...

Search

About Me

I'm Julian M Bucknall, the M because it's my middle initial and because I and the other Julian Bucknall (the movie guy) would like to differentiate ourselves.

I'm a programmer by trade, an actor by ambition, and an algorithms guy by osmosis. I write articles for PCPlus in my spare time, not that there's much of that.

Julian M Bucknall Apart from that, an ex-pat Brit, atheist, microbrew enthusiast, Pet Shop Boys fanboy, slide rule and HP calculator collector, amateur photographer, Altoids muncher.

DevExpress

I'm Chief Technology Officer at Developer Express, a software company that writes some great controls and tools for .NET and Delphi. I'm responsible for the technology oversight and vision of the company.

Validation

Validate markup as HTML5 (beta)     Validate CSS

Bottom swirl

Archives

February 2012 (4)
SMTWTFS
« Jan  
1234
567891011
12131415161718
19202122232425
26272829

Like this Archive Calendar widget? Download it here.

Social networking

Google ads

The OUT Campaign

The OUT Campaign

My Tweets

Bottom swirl