π TrackMeNot – good luck selling data
π TrackMeNot – good luck selling data
π© Hashtags: #Anonymity #Extension #Security
π‘ TrackMeNot is one of the oldest browser extensions and a tool from the authors of AdNauseam (https://t.me/c/1215587418/639) with the same order of magnitude of purpose: not just to protect yourself from pissed-off privacy violators, but to strike at their favorite tool – the search engine.
The extension sends random background queries to search engines, turning a neat dossier on the user into a Frankenstein’s pumpkin. Inexplicably banned (https://www.trackmenot.io/googleban) by Google, just like AdNauseam. It is also labeled malicious, which is true in principle, but it only harms Google.
βοΈ Details
~ open source JavaScript
~ it is installed on chrome-like systems by downloading and unpacking a separate repository (https://github.com/vtoubiana/TrackMeNot-Chrome).
~ all requests are generated locally, no third parties
~ simulates the nature of people: adjusts a new request to the output on previous requests (unique for each machine)
~ simulates transitions: sends a selective request to click on a link from the output
~ customizable lists of search engines, queries, their frequency (recommended 10 per hour) and banned words
~ burst mode: queries are sent only during the actual search by the user
~ 2 query modes: silent and tab mode (opens a separate tab for queries, better masking)
~ query logging
~ optional list (https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2150281/REVEALED-Hundreds-words-avoid-using-online-dont-want-government-spying-you.html#ixzz1w1SkH6gY) of “terrorist queries” according to the US Department of Homeland Security
π Link: trackmenot.io
π₯Go to our website, https://brainshacking.com.
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