Protecting your online privacy
The Tor website describes a common technique used on the internet called traffic analysis,
Traffic analysis can be used to infer who is talking to whom over a public network. Knowing the source and destination of your Internet traffic allows others to track your behavior and interests.
This can impact your checkbook if, for example, an e-commerce site uses price discrimination based on your country or institution of origin. It can even threaten your job and physical safety by revealing who and where you are.
For example, if you’re travelling abroad and you connect to your employer’s computers to check or send mail, you can inadvertently reveal your national origin and professional affiliation to anyone observing the network, even if the connection is encrypted.
Other than traffic analysis, most websites you visit track who you are, where you are, your habits, behaviour, affiliations, preferences, what are you looking for, and it even goes as far as tracking and collecting your, otherwise personal and private, website browsing history.
This website for one, you are viewing it on the clear, unencrypted, and your internet provider can easily catalogue it as viewed by you, someone with a sniffer (a sort of widely available internet traffic capturing software) can also browse it with you in its full format (including your personal messages and comments), and anyone, anywhere, sniffing in between your connection and this website can do the same.
An internet provider or authority might also block access for all sorts of censoring reasons, what will censor you and everybody using that line of ever reading this website if you are reading this on the clear, as you are, right now.
Webmasters insert advertisement code in their webpages in order to monetize their websites – a code shared among many websites on the internet – this code sends over and over information about you directly to the marketing agencies desks. This information only gets refined further as you browse sites containing ads from this very same advertisement agency, until a full individual profile is formed. There is a science, a discipline behind it and all.
Companies embed code in their webpages to track your information and generate a profile about you, a profile you never authorized them to do so, and this profile is used by themselves or sold/handed to 3rd parties, including governments, to profile individuals, entire regions, countries, groups, and so on.
Lack of privacy can be very damaging, as most people are starting to take notice of for example when they can not delete their own data out of Facebook – your data is completely out of your control, you said too much about yourself, it is all out in the wild, you can not delete all that you ever put in it, and you can also not delete your profile from none of this companies that sneakily tracked and profiled you, nor from who they sold this information to, without even requesting your authorization to do so.
Just to clarify, this tracking and profiling do not appear to you – they are hidden from you. You might be not fully aware of what is happening, but there is a lot of software grabbing, processing and recording the more they can get out of you every time you browse a web page; because for this companies, the collected information, is worth a lot financially.
They are basically stealing your privacy, in an unauthorized exposure of who you are and what your location, habits, behavior, affiliations and preferences are, opening a window to your private life, in order to enrich themselves, and only. In order to gather intelligence. Mining people’s personal information like mining for gold; without ownership, licensing nor compensation – in other words, this is robbery done through a not yet properly regulated medium.
Yet as usual, the law enforcement protects who the big money, rather the small, comes from.
So, if you try to acquire personal, otherwise private data out of the companies that acquire unauthorized data out of you, you are a trespasser and go to jail; but if this companies methodically steal and sell your personal, otherwise private data, they are doing “business”.
Below are the three main useful and basic add-ons for the Mozilla Firefox web browser to help you reinforce you privacy and explicitly deny the grab of anything away from you while browsing the internet; most browsers have their own versions of the same, and you can look for them in their respective add on catalogues.
Ghostery
Protect your privacy. See who’s tracking your web browsing and block them with Ghostery.
http://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/ghostery/
In the post-install script, check all filters and save – this add-on will block most known trackers from collecting your data and habits on the internet,whatever purpose that might had.
Adblock plus
Annoyed by adverts? Troubled by tracking? Bothered by banners? Install
Adblock Plus now to regain control of the internet and change the way
that you view the web.
http://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/adblock-plus/
HTTPS Everywhere
HTTPS Everywhere encrypts your communications with a number of major websites.
Many sites on the web offer some limited support for encryption over HTTPS,
but make it difficult to use. For instance, they may default to
unencrypted HTTP, or fill encrypted pages with links that go back to the
unencrypted site.The HTTPS Everywhere extension fixes these problems by rewriting all requests to these sites to HTTPS.
http://www.eff.org/https-everywhere
All plugins will update themselves with time, and you can get specific lists for Adblock plus from the EasyList website (such as lists for French language websites, German etc),
EasyList is the primary Easy subscription that removes adverts from English webpages, including unwanted frames, images and objects. It is the most popular list for Adblock Plus, with over 7 million daily users, and forms the basis of over a dozen combination and supplementary subscriptions.
http://adblockplus.org/en/subscriptions
This add ons do not affect the browsing experience in any way, other than removing trackers, advertisement and encrypting your connection so nobody can sniff your internet activity – pages will also appear like normal, just with all of its advertisements (such as Google Adsense, Clicksor, etc) blanked out.
Pages actually do load faster with them even if they are encrypted, as there is no overhead loading marketing and tracking related data from miscellaneous servers at every single page load.
If you want to go further and really go full-on anonymous to the internet, you might want to give Tor a go,
Tor is free software and an open network that helps
you defend against a form of network surveillance that
threatens personal freedom and privacy, confidential business
activities and relationships, and state security known as traffic analysis.Tor protects you by bouncing your communications around a
distributed network of relays run by volunteers all around
the world: it prevents somebody watching your Internet
connection from learning what sites you visit, and it prevents
the sites you visit from learning your physical location.
Tor works with many of your existing applications, including
web browsers, instant messaging clients, remote login, and
other applications based on the TCP protocol.
The Tor distribution comes with a Firefox plugin – the plugin sits in the bottom bar of the browser, and you can simply click a button to turn your own anonymity on and off.
All the software listed above is free and open sourced (which means, if you have the knowledge you can modify, extend or simplify it at will), they run in a multitude of different machines and operating systems, and are readily available in very easy to install packages.