diff --git a/content/knowledge/Badness Enumeration.md b/content/knowledge/Badness Enumeration.md index 0cfc5d1..4a64a0d 100644 --- a/content/knowledge/Badness Enumeration.md +++ b/content/knowledge/Badness Enumeration.md @@ -13,7 +13,7 @@ The obvious argument against badness enumeration is that there are so many threa ## Adblocking Extensions -On top of the [obvious problem](#the-obvious-problem) mentioned above, there are various technical reasons why advertisement/tracker blocking extensions cannot provide privacy. One of which is the fact that tracking can be done without any scripts at all. For example, a website only needs to know your session ID using a cookie and save all logs associated with that ID. It can then analyize when you visited the website, how long you visited the website for, which page on the website you spent the most time on, what you looked at, and so on. Another problem is that a website can just host its own tracking code or [proxy third party tracking code under its own domain](https://gist.github.com/paivaric/211ca15afd48c5686226f5f747539e8b). Just because your adblocker blocks connections to Google Analytics does not mean that you can be sure you are actually "safe" from Google Analytics at all. Even when you are successful in doing so, there is nothing stopping the website from sharing the analytics data it collected on its own with Google either. +On top of the [obvious problem](#the-obvious-problem) mentioned above, there are various technical reasons why advertisement/tracker blocking extensions cannot provide privacy. One of which is the fact that tracking can be done without any scripts at all. For example, a website only needs to know your session ID using a cookie and save all logs associated with that ID. It can then analyize when you visited the website, how long you visited the website for, which page on the website you spent the most time on, what you looked at, and so on. Another problem is that a website can just host its own tracking code or [proxy third party tracking code under its own domain](https://gist.github.com/paivaric/211ca15afd48c5686226f5f747539e8b). Just because your adblocker blocks connections to Google Analytics does not mean that you you are actually "safe" from Google Analytics at all. Even if you are successful in doing so, there is nothing stopping the website from sharing the analytics data it collected on its own with Google either. "Okay, so adblockers are unreliable, but what is the harm?" you may ask.