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View Full Version : Google has secret webpages that feed your personal data to advertisers, report says



Frank V
4th September 2019, 18:31
Source: C|NET (https://www.cnet.com/news/google-has-secret-webpages-that-feed-your-personal-data-to-advertisers-report-says/)




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New evidence submitted for an investigation into Google's collection of personal data in the European Union (https://www.cnet.com/news/google-faces-eu-probe-over-ad-privacy-practices/) reportedly accuses the search giant of stealthy sending your personal user data to advertisers. The company allegedly relays this information to advertisers using hidden webpages, allowing it to circumvent EU privacy regulations.

The evidence was submitted to Ireland's Data Protection Commission (https://www.dataprotection.ie/en/news-media/press-releases/data-protection-commission-opens-statutory-inquiry-google-ireland-limited), the main watchdog over the company in the European Union, by Johnny Ryan, chief policy officer for privacy-focused browser maker Brave, according to a Financial Times report (https://www.ft.com/content/e3e1697e-ce57-11e9-99a4-b5ded7a7fe3f?emailId=5d6fa42aa4cae8000444d8d0&segmentId=ce31c7f5-c2de-09db-abdc-f2fd624da608) Wednesday. Ryan reportedly said he discovered that Google used a tracker containing web browsing information, location and other data and sent it to ad companies via webpages that "showed no content," according to FT. This could allow companies buying ads to match a user's Google profile and web activity to profiles from other companies, which is against Google's own ad buying rules, according to the FT.

In response, Google said Wednesday it doesn't serve "personalized ads or send bid requests to bidders without user consent."

The process laid out by Ryan could potentially be "cookie matching" or "cookie syncing," an ad industry practice of matching ads across multiple sites based on a user's browsing history. A Google developer page (https://developers.google.com/authorized-buyers/rtb/cookie-guide) on cookie matching explains the process and the privacy principles the search engine follows, such as not allowing the info to be harvested by multiple companies.

The Data Protection Commission began an investigation into Google's practices in May (https://www.cnet.com/news/google-faces-eu-probe-over-ad-privacy-practices/) after it received a complaint from Brave that Google was allegedly violating the EU's General Data Protection Regulation (https://www.cnet.com/news/what-gdpr-means-for-facebook-google-the-eu-us-and-you/).


Source: C|NET (https://www.cnet.com/news/google-has-secret-webpages-that-feed-your-personal-data-to-advertisers-report-says/)



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Ironically, three of the URLs behind the links in the article above contained trackers. :sarcastic: No worries though ─ I've sanitized the links. ;)

RogeRio
5th September 2019, 14:16
for long time I use extensions ABP (add block plus) that control scripts (hidden or not), and Ghostery which control tracking sites.

Add Block Plus (https://adblockplus.org/) - Experience a freer, faster web and block annoying ads. Acceptable Ads are allowed by default to support sites, but can be customized.

Ghostery (https://www.ghostery.com/) -- helps you browse smarter by giving you control over ads and tracking technologies to speed up page loads, eliminate clutter, and protect your data.

The Opera Browser (https://www.opera.com/) have a built-in Add Block harder to be detected by websites, and a Free VPN to hide your Geo-location.

I'm not advertising, but these kind of tools may work fine, against internet Adds and Trackings.

ExomatrixTV
6th September 2019, 11:26
The complete list of alternatives to all Google products:
https://www.techspot.com/news/80729-complete-list-alternatives-all-google-products.html

petra
6th September 2019, 11:42
Just to add;
The one thing you cannot hide, unless you are behind a VPN, is your IP Address
They can use this to ad-match you also. I notice it most at work - when one person goes onto a dating site, we all start getting dating ads.