I tried a tor privacy browser in the past and it was bad news. I ended up taking the blame for some of the illegal traffic in the peer-to-peer network from my ISP. I may not have been protecting myself with a VPN though.
You can get Add-Ons to change your outgoing headers - User-Agent and the like.
At DEF CON 25 in 2017 - Svea Eckert demonstrated how to de-anonymise tracking data collected by ad agencies using the URLs of the pages someone visits in a month.
more than you do, and then what about your Linked-In profile, your Google account, or whatever online accounts you have - they very often have unique identifiers in the URL.
Svea was able to piece together a German politician's profile together and went and showed her the online searches included in the dataset
Interesting. I wonder if there is a way to randomize the pieces of info they are able to collect from the browser.
Tor Browser tries to make the browser fingerprints identical for their users.
https://www.torproject.org/download/
I tried a tor privacy browser in the past and it was bad news. I ended up taking the blame for some of the illegal traffic in the peer-to-peer network from my ISP. I may not have been protecting myself with a VPN though.
That is not how Tor works. I don't know what you were doing, but quite a lot of disinformation about Tor is along those lines.
You can get Add-Ons to change your outgoing headers - User-Agent and the like.
At DEF CON 25 in 2017 - Svea Eckert demonstrated how to de-anonymise tracking data collected by ad agencies using the URLs of the pages someone visits in a month.
For instance I would expect no-one visits
https://communities.win/u/Geek-the-Mage/
more than you do, and then what about your Linked-In profile, your Google account, or whatever online accounts you have - they very often have unique identifiers in the URL.
Svea was able to piece together a German politician's profile together and went and showed her the online searches included in the dataset
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1nvYGi7-Lxo