Log In

View Full Version : History sniffing--secretly tracking your movement on the web



sharingwisdom
12-06-2010, 12:38 PM
https://www.tennessean.com/article/20101206/BUSINESS01/12060341/Websites+secretly+harvest+user+visits
Excerpt

SAN FRANCISCO — Dozens of websites have been secretly harvesting lists of places that their users previously visited online, everything from news articles to bank sites to pornography, a team of computer scientists found.

The information is valuable for con artists to learn more about their targets and send them personalized attacks. It also allows e-commerce companies to adjust ads or prices — for instance, if the site knows you've just come from a competitor that is offering a lower price.

Although passwords aren't at risk, in harvesting a detailed list of where you've been online, sites can create thorough profiles on its users.

The technique the University of California at San Diego researchers investigated is called "history sniffing" and is a result of the way browsers interact with websites and record where they've been. A few lines of programming code are all a site needs to pull it off.

Although security experts have known for nearly a decade that such snooping is possible, the latest findings offer some of the first public evidence of sites exploiting the problem. Current versions of the Firefox and Internet Explorer browsers still allow this, as do older versions of Chrome and Safari, the researchers said.

The report adds to growing worry about surreptitious surveillance by Internet companies and comes as federal regulators in the U.S. are proposing a "Do Not Track" tool that would prevent advertisers from following consumers around online to sell them more products

someguy
12-06-2010, 01:09 PM
https://www.tennessean.com/article/20101206/BUSINESS01/12060341/Websites+secretly+harvest+user+visits
Excerpt

SAN FRANCISCO — Dozens of websites have been secretly harvesting lists of places that their users previously visited online, everything from news articles to bank sites to pornography, a team of computer scientists found.

The information is valuable for con artists to learn more about their targets and send them personalized attacks. It also allows e-commerce companies to adjust ads or prices — for instance, if the site knows you've just come from a competitor that is offering a lower price.

Although passwords aren't at risk, in harvesting a detailed list of where you've been online, sites can create thorough profiles on its users.

The technique the University of California at San Diego researchers investigated is called "history sniffing" and is a result of the way browsers interact with websites and record where they've been. A few lines of programming code are all a site needs to pull it off.

Although security experts have known for nearly a decade that such snooping is possible, the latest findings offer some of the first public evidence of sites exploiting the problem. Current versions of the Firefox and Internet Explorer browsers still allow this, as do older versions of Chrome and Safari, the researchers said.

The report adds to growing worry about surreptitious surveillance by Internet companies and comes as federal regulators in the U.S. are proposing a "Do Not Track" tool that would prevent advertisers from following consumers around online to sell them more products
Do you know if you browse the internet via "private browsing" with Mozilla or "incognito" with Chrome that it would eliminate this problem?

sharingwisdom
12-06-2010, 01:12 PM
I thought Moxilla and Firefox were the same.


Do you know if you browse the internet via "private browsing" with Mozilla or "incognito" with Chrome that it would eliminate this problem?

someguy
12-06-2010, 02:02 PM
I thought Moxilla and Firefox were the same.
They are. But you can go to you 'tools' and change you browser status to 'private browsing'.

sharingwisdom
12-06-2010, 03:14 PM
Thank you so much!!!

They are. But you can go to you 'tools' and change you browser status to 'private browsing'.