BigRedSparrow

joined 1 year ago
[–] BigRedSparrow@lemmygrad.ml 10 points 1 year ago

Nice bait OP. But not today. I'm on a date with my arch distro.

[–] BigRedSparrow@lemmygrad.ml 2 points 1 year ago

I've used arkenfox's firefox user profile for a good amount of time now and you're right to have some doubts about it.

No mitigation measures are foolproof and in actuality may result in you becoming more identifiable if you apply it improperly. The irony is that you're less likely to be identifiable using default settings on a default firefox instance than say enabling fingerprint resisting + ublock etc.

Privacy in the context of online browsing is achieved through obscurity. It uses techniques applied by browsers like TOR to become effective. In the case of TOR a wide adoption and it's careful implementation has made it one if not the only browser I would say offers decent privacy by default. In our case this template's usage is just a pretty insignificant fraction of the internet.

Browser fingerprinting technology is constantly evolving and uses many metrics that you may be unable to address if you're one to seek privacy. Just take it with a grain of salt. Although things may not look good for browsers nowadays. I'd say some privacy is better than no privacy at all.

[–] BigRedSparrow@lemmygrad.ml 1 points 1 year ago

You're not crazy. It's not really about the back button. Tiktok uses an algorithm that suggests you content that you like based on how you use your feed. It uses many different factors like the time you stay on a specific video/content, your likes, comments, how long you watch someone's profile, and more to suggest you things that will keep you there.

It's quite advanced but there are some concerning factors to that because it can't tell from right or wrong. So if you were to be browsing for something inappropriate, then yes it'll suggest you just that.

[–] BigRedSparrow@lemmygrad.ml 1 points 1 year ago* (last edited 5 months ago) (1 children)

You can figure out the checks and make your own patches to Qemu.

https://github.com/SafeExamBrowser/seb-win-refactoring/blob/cb84fbd689493a0486b0f4373ab98674afd2b38e/SafeExamBrowser.SystemComponents/VirtualMachineDetector.cs

I managed to get mine working.

Edit: SEB now checks for browser integrity so this is no longer relevant.