How to Stop Facebook, Google+, and Twitter From Tracking You

I then asked them: "If it's true that Facebook is tracking your browsing habits, would that a problem for you?" Most answered yes, reflected for a second, looked a little concerned, and asked me if it were true.
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The answer is that yes, it's true -- but not for every site. Those of us who know how the Web works know that every time you visit a page with a Facebook, Google+, or Twitter link, the code behind that link actually comes from Facebook or Twitter servers, so if you're surfing to that page with the same browser that you're currently logged into Facebook or Twitter with, then they know you're on that site. They know how long you spent on that site, how often you visit, and so forth. It's all very simple to do. Yet most people are cheerfully oblivious to this fact.

There's no getting around Google without the use of tor or anonymizing proxies, which can be annoying and slow, but using plug-ins like Track Me Not that send random search queries to Google from Firefox means that your actual search queries are mixed in with dozens of others and determining what you actually searched for becomes more challenging. Coupling that with the use of Gmail via IMAP and never logging into a Google service further reduces the amount of data that can be gathered.
For normal people, this situation is extremely difficult to control. It's easy enough to remember to lock your door when you leave your house, but this requires careful inspection of relatively arcane cookies in your browser, not to mention the problems related to disabling certain cookies for certain sites and thus breaking the session. Rather than simply closing your own drapes, it's more like trying to close the drapes of all your neighbors, and making sure that no cars drive by. It's simply impractical.

When I mentioned this scenario to those concerned folks at the bar, they were all genuinely puzzled. Why would anyone do such a thing? It's like wearing two pairs of underwear, right? When I detailed how this method protects your privacy, some got it and vowed to do the same thing.
Others didn't get it at all and didn't care (and after a few beers, who cares about privacy, amirite?). They are either the vanguard of a much more open and relaxed society that doesn't get upset when highly personal information is readily available to faceless people behind faceless servers and could easily be made available to anyone, or they're going to be the ones getting fired when leaked data shows their late-night adult video browsing habits in excruciating detail. In fact, with the new Facebook Timeline, they may not need a leak at all, it'll just show up on their page. Hooray.
Personally, I'm not taking any chances. I'll be keeping my social network interactions firewalled in their own browser. Shouldn't you?
This story, "How to stop Facebook, Google+, and Twitter from tracking you," was originally published at InfoWorld.com. Read more of Paul Venezia's The Deep End blog at InfoWorld.com. For the latest business technology news, follow InfoWorld.com on Twitter.






























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