When
you travel about the internet, you end up leaving behind traces. And
that includes more than just user comments in forums or online networks
like Facebook.
However
impersonal it might seem, there’s nothing anonymous about completely
normal surfing. There are two options to conceal your identity while
surfing, but both mean less convenience.
Website
operators can detect, for example: the region from which their site is
being accessed; which internet provider the visitor is using; and
whether that user has
visited the site before.
visited the site before.
That
same webmaster can also typically view which browser and operating
system are being used and other technical details about the user’s
computer. To a webmaster, the IP address is also visible for every
visitor to a website.
Is
this a big deal? In the opinion of privacy policy advocate Sandra
Mamitzsch, internet surfers should guard their privacy carefully.
“Simply
put, it’s nobody’s business what you’re doing on the internet,” the
spokesman for the Study Group on Data Retention says. The reasons for
this becomes obvious if you consider someone who wants to discreetly
review pages on AIDS or pregnancy.
There
are a number of ways for website operators to gather the data. :”When
you call up one single page, content from multiple providers is often
loaded at the same time without the user realizing it,” explains Dennis
Pietsch, who runs a website on anonymous surfing.
Ad
banners, videos, and sometimes even images are frequently integrated
into one website but stored on external servers, Pietsch explains.
“These servers are also contacted when the page is called and can
record the referring IP address,” he says.
Pietsch
cites the Google Analytics service as an example: “The free service
is offered to webmasters to let them analyse data related to their
visitors.” The point of contention is that the data is stored centrally
on the search engine company’s servers. In Germany, for example,
roughly 12 per cent of domains use Google Analytics.
There are a variety of techniques that can be used to guard against revealing too much information on the web.
“There
is unfortunately no optimal way to surf the internet anonymously. Each
method has advantages and disadvantages,” says Holger Bleich, an
editor at German computer magazine c’t.
The
current crop of browsers offer settings for anonymous surfing. “This
ultimately only ends up preventing your own computer from recording
where you surf and stops cookies from being saved. The traces that you
leave behind on the internet are details that the browser itself can’t
stop,” Bleich says.
Another
option is programmes and services to direct internet traffic through
so-called proxy servers. “The websites you visit in that case only ever
see the IP address of that proxy server,” Bleich says. This prevents
web shops from recognizing repeat visitors, for example.
“Law
enforcement agencies can still determine the identity of the users in
some cases, since the proxy servers store that data,” says Bleich.
The fact that prosecutors or even companies try to determine the identity of a user is not that unusual, Bleich says.
“Even
the relatively harmless transgression of using a swap bazaar can lead
to the copyright holders pursuing the identity of the user behind a
specific IP address from the state prosecutor’s office,” Bleich notes.
The
German Supreme Court recently overturned that country’s law of data
retention. Even so, “most providers tend to store the data for at least
a few years,” says privacy advocate Mamitzsch. This means that the
data can potentially be requested from the provider within that
timeframe.
The
safest way to ensure that no data is collected by websites involves a
heavy layer of protection. “To protect your own identity effectively
when you’re surfing the web, you need the TOR and JAP anonymisation
services. The page requests are then broken down and fed across
multiple servers to the point where it’s no longer possible to see
where they originated,” Bleich says.
True
anonymization carries with it one serious problem: Transfer speeds are
significantly decreased as a result of the multiple redirections.
“Downloading large files can then become an unbearable trial of
patience,” Bleich explains.
Pietsch
also sees convenience as mutually exclusive with anonymity: “Put all
of the tricks for anonymous surfing into practice and you’ll be surfing
the same way they did back in the early days of the internet.”
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