WBTW

How you’re tracked online — and what you can do about it

Though Facebook gets the attention because of a recent data privacy scandal, the social network is far from alone in collecting massive amounts of data on you to help marketers sell you stuff. Google, for one, also does extensive tracking to power its advertising engines. 

Web developer Dylan Curran posted a thread on Twitter last weekend that quickly went viral. He tweeted, “Want to freak yourself out? I’m gonna show just how much of your information the likes of Facebook and Google store about you without you even realising it.”

In his series of tweets and an opinion piece in The Guardian, Curran — who told CBSN he “was basically a nobody before this exploded” — outlined the information Google stores on users, ranging from users’ location to app usage to their YouTube history. He similarly highlighted Facebook’s collection of personal information, saying the social media giant “has reams and reams of data on you, too.”

And many other websites and apps run ads sold by Facebook and Google and exchange data with them. Beyond that, plenty of services including Uber and Amazon keep detailed histories on you. 

Here are some of the ways to block or minimize such tracking — but they come with trade-offs.

Tracking IDs

Websites have long used unique IDs in “cookies” — data files stored in your browser — to know it’s you when you return a week later. Cookies also let advertising networks run by the likes of Facebook and Google connect you as you visit multiple websites. Phones and tablets have a device advertising ID that apps can use to track you. 

Many browsers also let you install add-ons that block ad trackers. Notable add-ons include Ghostery or the Electronic Frontier Foundation’s Privacy Badger. 

Location Services

Many apps need your location to work. Mapping apps, for instance, can’t tell you when to turn without knowing where you are. Video services typically have rights only in certain countries and need to verify your location. But location can be used for much more. Google, for instance, keeps a fairly detailed account of your whereabouts through a feature called Timeline. 

Signing In

Signing into an online account gives services a sure-fire way of tracking you. Facebook won’t work at all without an account; Google merely works better with one. And you’ll generally need an account with any service that charges you, although sometimes you can sign in with your Facebook or Google ID instead. 

IP Address

The Internet Protocol address lists where your phone or computer lives on the internet; it’s how you get messages and load websites. But IP addresses can also help companies remember who you are and link the various devices you use, since most homes use a single IP address for the whole network. Databases can also map IP addresses to physical locations.