Hi,
aka:Every add-on installed/not installed gives you one more bit of detection.If [x] records you visiting an internet forum via TBB and leaking something and detect another visitor with the same 3 bits set looking for a train schedule, they can verify with a high confidence you posted that message and live in that area. That's why it's important that every TBB installation has the same Http-Header values and same add-ons.
With this logic, TorBrowser users could select a unique set of add-ons each session, correct?
You don't need any studies, it's simple common knowledge.
I second the request for some documented research, even if we do it ourselves. The first thought I had was a way for people to verify their identity by seeing their fingerprint by visiting a website, or something close to what others might be looking for, though this could also be an off-line thing.
Wordlife, Spencer
pacifica@xxxxxxxxxx wrote:Hello afternoon / evening / morning tor-talk -- I am hoping that someonecan point me in the right direction. I know it is well-discussed that adding Firefox add-ons to the Tor Browser Bundle decreases anonymity, but I would like to review the studies myself. I'm having troublefinding credible research where detection of add-ons has resulting in asignificant decrease in anonymity... can someone please point me to those resources? To be explicit, I am not concerned with "plug-ins" like Java or Flash, but rather "add-ons" like HTTPS everywhere or Privacy Badger. Thanks in advance. pacifica
-- tor-talk mailing list - tor-talk@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe or change other settings go to https://lists.torproject.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/tor-talk