https://www.ghacks.net/2022/02/12/mozil ... -tech-ipa/
Wow. The optics of this could kill Firefox dead, no matter what Mozilla's intent is or even if this is actually beneficial.
Is this really as bad as it looks? I tried to read the design document but wasn't able to get my head around it
If this is a real thing at this point, how to not only disable it, but actually completely remove it from Firefox code at build time?
Mozilla is now working with Facebook/Meta to make new adtech API
Mozilla is now working with Facebook/Meta to make new adtech API
*Always* check the changelogs BEFORE updating that important software!
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Re: Mozilla is now working with Facebook/Meta to make new adtech API
Our bad isn't as bad as their bad, so our bad is better.
(There's probably some "word" for all of that.)
Oh, morons.
Maybe Google, now that they've eaten them alive, have decided to cut off the till, so they're looking for someone else to pay their salaries.
(There's probably some "word" for all of that.)
Oh, morons.
Maybe Google, now that they've eaten them alive, have decided to cut off the till, so they're looking for someone else to pay their salaries.
Mozilla/5.0 (Windows; U; Windows NT 5.1; en-US; rv:1.9.1.19) Gecko/20110420 SeaMonkey/2.0.14 Pinball NoScript FlashGot AdblockPlus
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Re: Mozilla is now working with Facebook/Meta to make new adtech API
Just saw this presentation, which was much easier to understand - https://docs.google.com/presentation/d/ ... -P-TY/edit
This entire system seems to rely on trusting adtech servers with users' privacy: IIUC it leaves it entirely up to adtech servers to A) actually apply the data-scrambling measures outlined in the presentation, B) do a good enough job at it that the data really can't be unscrambled, C) not go back on (A) and (B) later, and D) not get hacked (or planted) by malvertisers trying to subvert the system.
Am I reading it right that the only privacy implemented on the user's device(s) is that websites can't enumerate existing match keys?
This has me scared to update to Firefox 98+ and not completely sure I should even be trusting the 97.0.1 I'm using now. Is there any indication of when/if Mozilla is going to implement IPA in Firefox? And if they are what options people building FF from source would have?
This entire system seems to rely on trusting adtech servers with users' privacy: IIUC it leaves it entirely up to adtech servers to A) actually apply the data-scrambling measures outlined in the presentation, B) do a good enough job at it that the data really can't be unscrambled, C) not go back on (A) and (B) later, and D) not get hacked (or planted) by malvertisers trying to subvert the system.
Am I reading it right that the only privacy implemented on the user's device(s) is that websites can't enumerate existing match keys?
This has me scared to update to Firefox 98+ and not completely sure I should even be trusting the 97.0.1 I'm using now. Is there any indication of when/if Mozilla is going to implement IPA in Firefox? And if they are what options people building FF from source would have?
*Always* check the changelogs BEFORE updating that important software!
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Re: Mozilla is now working with Facebook/Meta to make new adtech API
Hadn't heard anything about this in a while, so did some digging and found that the latest spec is moved to https://github.com/patcg-individual-drafts/ipa
I wasn't able to read all of that, but read enough of it to gather that they're aware of the concern I raised in the previous post about malvertising server, and they're trying to design the protocol so that won't be an issue.
And to answer part of my earlier questions: looks like this is not currently implemented in Firefox.
I wasn't able to read all of that, but read enough of it to gather that they're aware of the concern I raised in the previous post about malvertising server, and they're trying to design the protocol so that won't be an issue.
And to answer part of my earlier questions: looks like this is not currently implemented in Firefox.
*Always* check the changelogs BEFORE updating that important software!
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