Wired: No Safe Browser Out There Any Longer

Jayzus! Big Brother is mos def watching you.

Wired Magazine headline: A New Attack Can Unmask Anonymous Users on Any Major Browser

Sub-headline: Researchers have found a way to use the web’s basic functions to identify who visits a site—without the user detecting the hack.

https://www.wired.com/story/web-deanonymization-side-channel…

EVERYONE FROM ADVERTISERS and marketers to government-backed hackers and spyware makers wants to identify and track users across the web. And while a staggering amount of infrastructure is already in place to do exactly that, the appetite for data and new tools to collect it has proved insatiable. With that reality in mind, researchers from the New Jersey Institute of Technology are warning this week about a novel technique attackers could use to de-anonymize website visitors and potentially connect the dots on many components of targets’ digital lives.

The findings, which NJIT researchers will present at the Usenix Security Symposium in Boston next month, show how an attacker who tricks someone into loading a malicious website can determine whether that visitor controls a particular public identifier, like an email address or social media account, thus linking the visitor to a piece of potentially personal data.

When you visit a website, the page can capture your IP address, but this doesn’t necessarily give the site owner enough information to individually identify you. Instead, the hack analyzes subtle features of a potential target’s browser activity to determine whether they are logged into an account for an array of services, from YouTube and Dropbox to Twitter, Facebook, TikTok, and more. Plus the attacks work against every major browser, including the anonymity-focused Tor Browser.

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The money shot in this article:

“If you’re an average internet user, you may not think too much about your privacy when you visit a random website,” says Reza Curtmola, one of the study authors and a computer science professor at NJIT. “But there are certain categories of internet users who may be more significantly impacted by this, like people who organize and participate in political protest, journalists, and people who network with fellow members of their minority group. And what makes these types of attacks dangerous is they’re very stealthy. You just visit the website and you have no idea that you’ve been exposed.”

I could make a case for blockchain Web 3 anonymity, but, so many of the scam projects have damaged the legit projects that I am taking a break from trying to figure out winners and losers in this realm.

But to hear that Tor is now easily hacked by snoops just blows my mind. Sounds like a boon for Private Eyes investigating the porn and gambling addicts for aggrieved spouses. I know an investigative reporter who uses Tor also. I need to send her this article.