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Your 'anonymized' web browsing history may not be anonymous
Raising further questions
about privacy on the internet, researchers from Princeton and Stanford
universities have released a study showing that a specific person's online
behavior can be identified by linking anonymous web browsing histories with
social media profiles.
"We show that
browsing histories can be linked to social media profiles such as Twitter,
Facebook or Reddit accounts," the researchers wrote in a paper scheduled
for presentation at the 2017 World Wide Web Conference Perth, Australia, in
April.
"It is already known
that some companies, such as Google and Facebook, track users online and know
their identities," said Arvind Narayanan, an assistant professor of
computer science at Princeton and one of the authors of the research article.
But those companies, which consumers choose to create accounts with, disclose
their tracking. The new research shows that anyone with access to browsing
histories -- a great number of companies and organizations -- can identify many
users by analyzing public information from social media accounts, Narayanan
said.
"Users may assume
they are anonymous when they are browsing a news or a health website, but our
work adds to the list of ways in which tracking companies may be able to learn
their identities," said Narayanan, an affiliated faculty member at
Princeton's Center for Information Technology Policy.
Narayanan noted that the
Federal Communications Commission recently adopted privacy rules for internet
service providers that allow them to store and use consumer information only
when it is "not reasonably linkable" to individual users.
"Our results suggest
that pseudonymous browsing histories fail this test," the researchers
wrote.
In the article, the
authors note that online advertising companies build browsing histories of
users with tracking programs embedded on webpages. Some advertisers attach
identities to these profiles, but most promise that the web browsing
information is not linked to anyone's identity. The researchers wanted to know
if it were possible to de-anonymize web browsing and identify a user even if
the web browsing history did not include identities.
They decided to limit
themselves to publicly available information. Social media profiles,
particularly those that include links to outside webpages, offered the
strongest possibility. The researchers created an algorithm to compare
anonymous web browsing histories with links appearing in people's public social
media accounts, called "feeds."
"Each person's
browsing history is unique and contains tell-tale signs of their
identity," said Sharad Goel, an assistant professor at Stanford and an
author of the study.
The programs were able to
find patterns among the different groups of data and use those patterns to
identify users. The researchers note that the method is not perfect, and it
requires a social media feed that includes a number of links to outside sites.
However, they said that "given a history with 30 links originating from
Twitter, we can deduce the corresponding Twitter profile more than 50 percent
of the time."
The researchers had even
greater success in an experiment they ran involving 374 volunteers who
submitted web browsing information. The researchers were able to identify more
than 70 percent of those users by comparing their web browsing data to hundreds
of millions of public social media feeds. (The number of original participants
in the study was higher, but some users were eliminated because of technical
problems in processing their information.)
Yves-Alexandre de
Montjoye, an assistant professor at Imperial College London, said the research
shows how "easy it is to build a full-scale 'de-anonymizationer' that
needs nothing more than what's available to anyone who knows how to code."
"All the evidence we
have seen piling up over the years showing the strong limits of data
anonymization, including this study, really emphasizes the need to rethink our
approach to privacy and data protection in the age of big data," said de
Montjoye, who was not involved in the project.
Source: Science Daily
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