Online Tracking is Out of Control—Privacy Badger Can Help You Fight Back

Online Tracking is Out of Control—Privacy Badger Can Help You Fight Back

Favorite Every time you browse the web, you’re being tracked. Most websites contain invisible tracking code that allows companies to collect and monetize data about your online activity. Many of those companies are data brokers, who sell your sensitive information to anyone willing to pay. That’s why EFF created Privacy Badger, a free, open-source browser…

Mad at Meta? Don't Let Them Collect and Monetize Your Personal Data

Mad at Meta? Don't Let Them Collect and Monetize Your Personal Data

Favorite If you’re fed up with Meta right now, you’re not alone. Google searches for deleting Facebook and Instagram spiked last week after Meta announced its latest policy changes. These changes, seemingly designed to appease the incoming Trump administration, included loosening Meta’s hate speech policy to allow for the targeting of LGBTQ+ people and immigrants. …

EFF Statement on U.S. Supreme Court's Decision to Uphold TikTok Ban

Favorite We are deeply disappointed that the Court failed to require the strict First Amendment scrutiny required in a case like this, which would’ve led to the inescapable conclusion that the government’s desire to prevent potential future harm had to be rejected as infringing millions of Americans’ constitutionally protected free speech. We are disappointed to…

Online Behavioral Ads Fuel the Surveillance Industry—Here’s How

Favorite A global spy tool exposed the locations of billions of people to anyone willing to pay. A Catholic group bought location data about gay dating app users in an effort to out gay priests. A location data broker sold lists of people who attended political protests.  What do these privacy violations have in common?…

"Is My Phone Listening To Me?"

Favorite The short answer is no, probably not! But, with EFF’s new site, Digital Rights Bytes, we go in–depth on this question—and many others. Whether you’re just starting to question some of the effects of technology in your life or you’re the designated tech wizard of your family looking for resources to share, Digital Rights Bytes…

How to Stop Advertisers From Tracking Your Teen Across the Internet

Favorite This post was written by EFF fellow Miranda McClellan. Teens between the ages of  13 and 17 are being tracked across the internet using identifiers known as Advertising IDs. When children turn 13, they age out of the data protections provided by the Children’s Online Privacy Protection Act (COPPA). Then, they become targets for…

FTC Report Confirms: Commercial Surveillance is Out of Control

Favorite A new Federal Trade Commission (FTC) report confirms what EFF has been warning about for years: tech giants are widely harvesting and sharing your personal information to fuel their online behavioral advertising businesses. This four-year investigation into the data practices of nine social media and video platforms, including Facebook, YouTube, and X (formally Twitter),…

Google Breaks Promise to Block Third-Party Cookies

Favorite Last week, Google backtracked on its long-standing promise to block third-party cookies in Chrome. This is bad for your privacy and good for Google’s business. Third-party cookies are a pervasive tracking technology that allow companies to snoop on your online activity for surveillance and ad-targeting purposes. The consumer harm caused by these cookies has…

Why Privacy Badger Opts You Out of Google’s “Privacy Sandbox”

Why Privacy Badger Opts You Out of Google’s “Privacy Sandbox”

Favorite Update July 22, 2024: Shortly after we published this post, Google announced it’s no longer deprecating third-party cookies in Chrome. We’ve updated this blog to note the news. The latest update of Privacy Badger opts users out of ad tracking through Google’s “Privacy Sandbox.”  Privacy Sandbox is Google’s way of letting advertisers keep targeting ads based…

How To Turn Off Google’s “Privacy Sandbox” Ad Tracking—and Why You Should

How To Turn Off Google’s “Privacy Sandbox” Ad Tracking—and Why You Should

Favorite Google has rolled out “Privacy Sandbox,” a Chrome feature first announced back in 2019 that, among other things, exchanges third-party cookies—the most common form of tracking technology—for what the company is now calling “Topics.” Topics is a response to pushback against Google’s proposed Federated Learning of Cohorts (FLoC), which we called “a terrible idea”…