Original toot:

It has come to my attention that many of the people complaining about #Firefox’s #PPA experiment don’t actually understand what PPA is, what it does, and what Firefox is trying to accomplish with it, so an explainer 🧵 is in order.

Targeted advertising sucks. It is invasive and privacy-violating, it enables populations to be manipulated by bad actors in democracy-endangering ways, and it doesn’t actually sell products.

Nevertheless, commercial advertisers are addicted to the data they get from targeted advertising. They aren’t going to stop using it until someone convinces them there’s something else that will work better.

“Contextual advertising works better.” Yes, it does! But, again, advertisers are addicted to the data, and contextual advertising provides much less data, so they don’t trust it.

What PPA says is, “Suppose we give you anonymized, aggregated data about which of your ads on which sites resulted in sales or other significant commitments from users?” The data that the browser collects under PPA are sent to a third-party (in Firefox’s case, the third party is the same organization that runs Let’s Encrypt; does anybody think they’re not trustworthy?) and aggregated and anonymized there. Noise is introduced into the data to prevent de-anonymization.

This allows advertisers to “target” which sites they put their ads on. It doesn’t allow them to target individuals. In Days Of Yore, advertisers would do things like ask people to bring newspapers ads into the store or mention a certain phrase to get deals. These were for collecting conversion statistics on paper ads. Ditto for coupons. PPA is a way to do this online.

Is there a potential for abuse? Sure, which is why the data need to be aggregated and anonymized by a trusted third party. If at some point they discover they’re doing insufficient aggregation or anonymization, then they can fix that all in one place. And if the work they’re doing is transparent, as compared to the entirely opaque adtech industry, the entire internet can weigh in on any bugs in their algorithms.

Is this a utopia? No. Would it be better than what we have now? Indisputably. Is there a clear path right now to anything better? Not that I can see. We can keep fighting for something better while still accepting this as an improvement over what we have now.

  • GenderNeutralBro@lemmy.sdf.org
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    4 months ago

    And what is the advertising industry doing to earn back the trust that they’ve eroded with their incessant, relentless abuse over the entire life of the Internet?

    • Virkkunen@fedia.io
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      4 months ago

      Creating ads that are even more targeted to you so you can forget about everything and buy that electric kitchen knife you just saw scrolling reddit

      • socsa@piefed.social
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        3 months ago

        I don’t know, I am on the fence about the XYT FULLFORGE lithium powered, rechargable electronic kitchen knife I saw on reddit. I just don’t know if I can trust the comments which say it stays sharp forever, and I am very skeptical that it truly has the fastest cutting speed of any knife on the market. Perhaps I will go read the Amazon reviews again to get more information about the patented digital motor design.

    • AnyOldName3@lemmy.world
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      4 months ago

      They’re not supposed to have trust. That’s why they’re only allowed fully anonymised data under this scheme. They do pay the bills, though, so they can’t be completely banished until there’s an alternative source of money.

      • xantoxis@lemmy.world
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        4 months ago

        There is no such thing as “fully anonymised data”. Data can be de-anonymised by anyone who aggregates it. It’s been demonstrated over and over and over again.

          • refalo@programming.dev
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            4 months ago

            Whoever reports this “anonymized” data still knows something about you, whether that’s a census employee at your physical house, or a website having your IP address. We can’t stop that information falling into the wrong hands. Bad actors are everywhere. All we can do is not provide the information in the first place.

      • GenderNeutralBro@lemmy.sdf.org
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        4 months ago

        That does nothing to deal with malware distribution, which has been a problem in pretty much every ad network. It does nothing to address the standard practice of making ads as obtrusive and flashy as possible.

        I do not accept the premise that advertising is the only possible business model for quality web sites. History suggests the opposite: that it is a toxic business model that creates backwards incentives.

        • Tywèle [she|her]@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          4 months ago

          So because it’s not THE perfect solution to every problem related to ads ever we should just not do anything?

          It doesn’t always have to be black and white.

          • GenderNeutralBro@lemmy.sdf.org
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            4 months ago

            Not at all. But I want to see advertisers make some goddamn effort of their own, and accept some responsibility for the shitshow that they have created.

            And until that happens, I’m certainly not going to feel bad about blocking ads across the board.

      • kalkulat@lemmy.world
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        4 months ago

        Go ahead and send me ads, and I’ll just block your site … never go there except when someone tries to trick me into it, and then my SITE-BLOCKER will refuse for me. Our now and future business IS OVER.

        “But why don’t you just trust us?” Because I’ve been online for 30 years and it’s been downhill ever since.

    • ikidd@lemmy.world
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      4 months ago

      I want the old internet back. God it was so wonderful before the dotcom bubble.

  • xantoxis@lemmy.world
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    4 months ago

    Completely facile argument, right there in the last sentence.

    We can keep fighting for something better while still accepting this as an improvement over what we have now.

    YOU BUILT THE FUCKING THING. Just turn it off and go away. Tada, we now have something better: no privacy-violating data at all.

    Who’s forcing you to make advertisers happy? Don’t answer that, because I don’t care. You can’t pretend to be about privacy and then build things that help advertisers violate it.

    This one’s also pretty funny btw:

    If at some point they discover they’re doing insufficient aggregation or anonymization, then they can fix that all in one place.

    Advertisers don’t give a shit. They have zero motivation to fix anonymization. They’re not going to HELP us get rid of privacy violations.

    • TJA!@sh.itjust.works
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      4 months ago

      Just turn it off and go away. Tada, we now have something better: no privacy-violating data at all.

      Well, yes. Except for the fact that advertisers now have an excuse to try more invasive things to get to their data

      Advertisers don’t give a shit. They have zero motivation to fix anonymization. They’re not going to HELP us get rid of privacy violations.

      That’s why a trusted third party is handling this. They care a lot, because of they fumble it they are now an untrusted third party and someone else will take care of the anonymization part

      • xantoxis@lemmy.world
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        4 months ago

        Well, yes. Except for the fact that advertisers now have an excuse to try more invasive things to get to their data

        They’re going to do this anyway. As far as Firefox is concerned, it’s the browser’s job to stop them. That’s what Firefox is selling: privacy

        because of they fumble it they are now an untrusted third party

        Assuming I take this for granted, they have already fumbled it by turning on an anti-privacy feature without consent. They can no longer be trusted. Not that you ever should have trusted them because whatever motivation they have for pure moral behavior now, that will change with the wind when more VC money gets involved, or there’s been a change in management.

        And firefox has ALREADY had a recent change in management, which is probably why THIS is happening NOW. They just bought an adtech firm for pete’s sake. Don’t trust other people with your data. At all.

        • TJA!@sh.itjust.works
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          4 months ago

          Did you even read the article or are you just hating? There is a will known additional non profit that is well known and trusted by probably everyone that knows about it. This nonprofit is handling the anonymization.

          • xantoxis@lemmy.world
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            4 months ago

            I read the damn ticket opened by mcc. I know about the non profit and I don’t trust them with my personal information. Any place that captures valuable data is vulnerable to an attack in the form of financial corruption. I’ll say it again, louder: If they have pure perfect morals now, you’ll be pissed at them in 3 years because management has changed and money got involved.

            EDIT: IDK if lemmy has a remindme type bot, but we’re gonna check back in on this one every so often so we can see how long it takes for them to sell out.

            • wizardbeard@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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              4 months ago

              If you don’t know who Let’s Encrypt are, please stop putting your whole ass on display.

              If they go rogue the internet as a whole will have much, much bigger fucking problems than ad data.

        • dustyData@lemmy.world
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          4 months ago

          Maybn read the article, chill down a bit. We all hate advertisers here. Everyone trusts Let’s Encrypt, they’re privacy and encryption advocates who run one of the largests online certificates repository. They’re a nonprofit, and they have been doing this for a decade. They’re the reason the internet is a bit safer by promoting widespread implementation of encrypted traffic.

          Sure, anyone can turn bad actor at any time. But this guys are starting from a really high bar and have a really strong reputation.

          Add: also, this is a good step for Mozilla. We want a internet free from Google, and that includes financially. Google puts practically the totality of the money for the Mozilla foundation. Donations don’t come close to the millions needed to develop and support a web browser. A direct relationship with advertisers, under Mozilla’s terms and not the advertisers predatory terms, would be a good thing.

      • ssm@lemmy.sdf.org
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        4 months ago

        Well, yes. Except for the fact that advertisers now have an excuse to try more invasive things to get to their data

        C’mon, just take the roofie and we promise we won’t try anything more forceful, little consumer… We promise we’ll stop if you give us just this little bit…

        • Ephera@lemmy.ml
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          4 months ago

          You can liken it to rape all you want, it is very much reality. I’d even go farther, that under capitalism advertisers don’t just have an excuse but an obligation to rape you, if there is no other cost-effective method to get the data their stakeholders want.

    • mryessir@lemmy.sdf.org
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      4 months ago

      YOU BUILT THE FUCKING THING. Just turn it off and go away. Tada, we now have something better: no privacy-violating data at all.

      Who’s forcing you to make advertisers happy? Don’t answer that, because I don’t care. You can’t pretend to be about privacy and then build things that help advertisers violate it.

      While I agree that IT IS A SERIOUS CONCERN THAT AGGREGATION AND ANONYMIZATION within a single entity is a true and bad security concern you are blaming the opposition, wrongfully (imho).

      The market forces advertising upon us. They step in and provide a temporarily (and not yet fully-transparent) alternative. And they are aware of said risk but still chiming in.

      Their feature is adopting current practices but try to find common ground. They do not enrich this data but anonymize it fully (apparently).

      The next iteration shall not include distributing this since it would strengthen advertisers I suppose. So your warning is fair but it appears to be hard to find practical common ground.

      I think their intention is awesome. Enable 80% of collecting demands and open up a discourse about what should have been done beforehand (the intrusive data collection).

      I once again prompt: Americans should be so fk proud of Mozilla. Inspect, Disrupt or Adapt and Be Open for Discussion.

      I have no idea what I am talking about, though.

    • ikidd@lemmy.world
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      4 months ago

      I have defended Mozilla for years, because we can’t let Chrome become the only browser engine available.

      But goddam, it’s getting hard to be enthusiastic about it. This is starting to get like voting for the genocidial dementia patient because at least he isn’t the megalomaniac pedophile.

  • addie@feddit.uk
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    4 months ago

    Man alive, I thought that Mozilla had been doing their own Personal Package Archives so that we didn’t have to deal with Ubuntu packaging it as a Snap anymore. And this is doubly disappointing.

  • SuckMyWang@lemmy.world
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    4 months ago

    This is the exact same story the whole internet has used and every time the 3rd party or whoever it is eventually gets corrupted and it turns out that they kept the original data. The company gets bought by Amazon or who google and repeat

    • verdigris@lemmy.ml
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      4 months ago

      It’s LetsEncrypt. If you don’t trust them the open web has bigger problems than Firefox’s new setting.

      • refalo@programming.dev
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        4 months ago

        I wouldn’t be surprised if most CAs are secretly compromised. I’m surprised nobody ever talks about it or wants to know how they operate securely if at all.

  • UnfortunateShort@lemmy.world
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    4 months ago

    Mozilla: We want to offer anonymised data so advertiser stop trying to track you with shady means. You can opt ou tho.

    Privacy ultras: WHY YOU WANT DATA?!

    Mozilla: …

    • Treczoks@lemmy.world
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      4 months ago

      That, and the point that ad blasters want to know the gory details of your private life in order to make their ads that one or two percent “more effective”.

      Does the Firefox really believe that sites will stop throwing a gazillion cookies and trackers just because they now also have PPA?

      I, for my part, opt to block both the cookies and trackers as much as I can and the PPA, too.

    • sabreW4K3@lazysoci.alOP
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      4 months ago

      If they didn’t understand user consent, would they really have the ability to opt out? I get that you’re on your soap box and seething with anger, but let’s not devolve into ludicrous nonsensical reframing.

      • laughterlaughter@lemmy.world
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        4 months ago

        When Chrome asks the user to activate a similar feature while Firefox doesn’t - welp, no. They don’t understand user consent.

        Imagine finding a Mozilla microphone under your dining table. “Oh, but you can remove it and toss it. That’s understanding user consent!”

        • sabreW4K3@lazysoci.alOP
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          4 months ago

          When Google utilised their Chrome dominance and forced the web into manifest v3 so they could curtail adblockers, did they ask for your consent?

          • laughterlaughter@lemmy.world
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            4 months ago

            No, and that’s why I don’t use Chrome. But at least they said they’d do this.

            Mozilla in turn said “hey here’s this neat feature. Don’t worry, it’s optional!” And then they silently activated it for everyone with an update.

            • sabreW4K3@lazysoci.alOP
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              4 months ago

              Mozilla said, “hey, in the chance you see an advert on the Internet, this will anonymise the data sent to the ad publishers for you automatically” and you said, “how dare you”!

              • laughterlaughter@lemmy.world
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                4 months ago

                Red herring, and you’re missing the point, and this is getting frustrating. If you ignore the argument below again, I will stop responding to you.

                From the Mozilla’s website (so you don’t say I’m ill-informed):

                https://support.mozilla.org/en-US/kb/privacy-preserving-attribution?as=u&utm_source=inproduct

                Firefox creates a report based on what the website asks, but does not give the result to the website. Instead, Firefox encrypts the report and anonymously submits it using the Distributed Aggregation Protocol (DAP) to an “aggregation service”.

                Zoom in:

                Firefox encrypts the report and anonymously submits it using the Distributed Aggregation Protocol (DAP) to an “aggregation service”.

                Zoom in:

                anonymously submits it

                Zoom in:

                submits it

                This is after an update, and it’s opt-out, that is, enabled by default. And not a single notification about it. If I don’t check my settings, or read about it, I would have never found out about this.

                WHY IS MY BROWSER SUBMITTING ANYTHING WITHOUT ASKING ME FIRST?!

                Plus it’s described as an experiment. And I’ve already told Mozilla to NEVER include me in any of its “experiments,” after the whole Mr. Robot fiasco. If this is labeled as an experiment, why is Mozilla not respecting my decision?

                That’s the issue I have with it. It doesn’t matter what it is. It doesn’t matter if it’s “for my own good.” I am supposed to be in control of my browser. I decide when my browser sends anything to the Internet about me, even if it’s anonymized.

                I would expect this from Chrome, and that’s why I don’t use it; not Firefox.

                • sabreW4K3@lazysoci.alOP
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                  4 months ago

                  Your browser already submits information about you by virtue of existing.

                  What this does is put the mechanisms to ring fence that in place. The same way that the Enhanced Tracking Protection does.

                  Kinda like how even if you’ve had an STI test recently, you should still use a condom when sleeping with strangers.

                  Regarding the opt-in versus opt-out stuff. That’s a dead fish. People go with what the default is. By default ETP is on. By default, autoplay is off. By default, HTTPS only mode is always on.

                  These are all things that happened without my explicit consent and they’ve all made the Internet a better place for normal people, not like me and you, but normal people who rely on the best defaults possible.

  • modulus@lemmy.ml
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    4 months ago

    This is bullshit. The total amount of advertising I want is zero. The total amount I want of tracking is zero. The total amount of experiments I want run on my data without consent is, guess, zero.

    • verdigris@lemmy.ml
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      4 months ago

      Then you keep blocking ads and nothing changes for you.

      The backlash here is wild and completely uninformed. This is only good for consumers, the ads that this will affect are already tracking you in more onerous ways.

          • laughterlaughter@lemmy.world
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            4 months ago

            You’re still missing the point. I know what the tech does. But it’s opt-out without user consent, not opt-in. And there is some phoning home for it to work, isn’t there?

            This is Mozilla pulling your pants down while you sleep, grabbing your balls to put the cup, pulling the pants back up, then carrying on as if nothing happened.

    • Ephera@lemmy.ml
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      4 months ago

      Well, this isn’t about you. If you’re blocking ads anyways, there’s going to be no data to report.

      But Firefox needs webpage owners to be able to make a buck off of supporting Firefox. Otherwise, we’ll see even more webpages suggesting to switch to Chrome.

    • Phegan@lemmy.world
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      4 months ago

      Do you donate to FOSS software you use?

      Your options are ads or donations. As it costs money to develop and host a lot of FOSS, in our capitalist world, it’s impossible to offer a service without somehow receiving money to continue to provide that service.

      • modulus@lemmy.ml
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        4 months ago

        Yes, for example I donate to thunderbird since I find it useful. And I wouldn’t mind donating to Firefox either provided they wouldn’t do this sort of fuckery.

        though in the long run we need to overturn capitalism of course, and that an economic model is viable doesn’t mean we should sustain it or justify it.

      • Ledivin@lemmy.world
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        4 months ago

        Do you donate to FOSS software you use?

        I do. Are there any other strawmen you’d like to throw at me?

        • IzzyScissor@lemmy.world
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          4 months ago

          “at me”?

          Bruh, you’re not who they were responding to. You don’t have to insert yourself and then get defensive.

          • communism@lemmy.ml
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            4 months ago

            The top level comment is a pretty generic and widely agreeable within privacy circles statement, so yeah the reply was reasonably interpreted to be directed at people who agree with the top level comment, not just the author of the comment specifically.

          • Ledivin@lemmy.world
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            4 months ago

            It was against an opinion I agree with… I’m sorry for “inserting myself” into a completely public discussion on social media 🙄🙄🙄

      • modulus@lemmy.ml
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        4 months ago

        It depends, but mostly no. And if that means some sites are not economically possible, so be it.

      • communism@lemmy.ml
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        4 months ago

        I do donate to sites I regularly use, and find this much preferable to ads. I think most people find this preferable to ads, given how much I see popular ad-free websites raising during donation drives.

    • refalo@programming.dev
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      4 months ago

      Well you can’t have that because it guarantees you stay irrelevant and broke. Google did not make money off of you and you were never their target audience. Google and Chrome only ever existed because the majority of people click ads. Same thing here. Mozilla has been ad-funded since at least 2005.

  • ssm@lemmy.sdf.org
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    4 months ago

    The data that the browser collects under PPA are sent to a third-party (in Firefox’s case, the third party is the same organization that runs Let’s Encrypt; does anybody think they’re not trustworthy?)

    I wouldn’t trust anyone with data this valuable, and even assuming they’re trustworthy now, who knows if they’ll be in a year; especially with how much “interest” they gain by now handling this data.

    and aggregated and anonymized there.

    I’m just supposed to believe and trust that they will do that?

    Is there a potential for abuse? Sure, which is why the data need to be aggregated and anonymized by a trusted third party.

    A “trusted third party” does not exist, and will never exist.

    Is this a utopia? No. Would it be better than what we have now? Indisputably. Is there a clear path right now to anything better? Not that I can see. We can keep fighting for something better while still accepting this as an improvement over what we have now.

    Or I can tell advertisers to eat shit and give them nothing, like I’ve been doing my whole life. Has been working well so far.

    • ahal@lemmy.ca
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      4 months ago

      Yes, all great points. But you’re comparing the wrong thing. The comparison isn’t PPA vs no ads. It’s PPA vs being personally targeted by ad companies. It’s clearly a step in the right direction.

      Or I can tell advertisers to eat shit and give them nothing, like I’ve been doing my whole life. Has been working well so far

      Now your getting it! Yes, just keep using an ad blocker and tell advertisers to fuck off! That’s exactly what we can all continue doing, and this PPA stuff will have 0 impact on us. But it will improve the lives of everyone not using ad blockers.

    • TJA!@sh.itjust.works
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      4 months ago

      If you don’t trust let’s encrypt SSL certificates, then you probably should probably stop using the Internet to be safe, as probably more than half of all websites are using them.

  • communism@lemmy.ml
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    4 months ago

    I understand it perfectly fine thank you. This should not be a hidden opt-out option.

  • Possibly linux@lemmy.zip
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    4 months ago

    What the heck Mozilla? The people complaining are the ones who understand it. Anyone who thinks this is ok is either a die hard Mozilla fan or doesn’t understand what it does. This is targeted advertising. You know how companies target vulnerable minorities? That’s what this enables. It isn’t just about “privacy” as targeted advertising is dark in many other ways.

  • 𝓔𝓶𝓶𝓲𝓮@lemm.ee
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    4 months ago

    They keep saying many words waving hands frantically and people still don’t like it. I bet if they explain 10th time with colourful diagrams and 3 minute whiteboard explainer video people still won’t like it. Such an ungrateful crowd

    You need hands on workshops, we will organise them with foundation budget. That will surely explain things sufficiently. We will also give out informational flyers in small communities to foster local enlightenment.

    • socsa@piefed.social
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      3 months ago

      They are definitely in a weird position. On one hand, the current state of internet advertising is horrifying. This has nothing to do with anything Firefox has done. On the other hand, trying to explain to privacy absolutists why these innovations in targeted advertising is actually a revolutionary leap in user privacy, is obviously never going to take.

  • smpl@discuss.tchncs.de
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    4 months ago

    I’m not even buying the premise. Any business can look at its bottomline to see if their advertising works. If they can’t, then its not working.

      • smpl@discuss.tchncs.de
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        4 months ago

        You’re in trouble already as a business, wasting a lot of money, if you don’t know where your target audience is. What you argue is that this is used for a business to probe where an advertisement would work. I’d argue that that is a very expensive way of finding your target audience, because you still have to pay for all the ads that didn’t work. There are much better ways of figuring out where your target audience is.

        I think most people believe that this obsessive data collection is neccessary, only because Google has repeatedly painted that narrative. This better advertising is just coincidentally the form of advertising that Google is in the best position to supply.

        If you carefully pick the places you advertise and do statistics on how it affect your business while a campaign runs I’m willing to bet you get a much better return. As a bonus to saving money you didn’t have to shit on an important principle in democracy, the autonomy of the people, protected by something called privacy.

  • ikidd@lemmy.world
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    4 months ago

    Why wouldn’t you bring all this up before you shove it into the browser to be discovered later, and make it the default? Whoever thought this was a good idea should be shot with a ball of their own shit.

      • ikidd@lemmy.world
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        4 months ago

        OK, I’ll watch their job postings like a hawk to learn what their strategies are going forward. Thanks for the tip!

        I’m pretty active in FOSS news, never saw a thing about this before it was rolled out. Maybe that’s on me and I just missed the obvious, but probably not. I don’t seem to be the only one taken by surprise.

    • sabreW4K3@lazysoci.alOP
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      4 months ago

      They should’ve brought it up before. Yes. They had to make it the default though. That was unavoidable.

      • Arthur Besse@lemmy.ml
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        4 months ago

        They had to make it the default though. That was unavoidable.

        For it to be useful at scale, sure, but reading this it sounds like Chrome’s version of it is still “experimental” and opt-in. Hopefully the backlash prevents it from being developed further.

  • Arthur Besse@lemmy.ml
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    4 months ago

    It has come to my attention that many of the people complaining about #Firefox’s #PPA experiment don’t actually understand what PPA is, what it does, and what Firefox is trying to accomplish with it

    The documentation under the “Learn more” link next to the “Allow websites to perform privacy-preserving ad measurement” checkbox in Firefox preferences explains very clearly what it is and how it works. Asserting that people who read that and are indignant about it being enabled by default just… “don’t actually understand” it is absurdly insulting and basically gaslighting.

    • Liz
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      4 months ago

      The vast majority of people never read the source material for anything, and that’s usually perfectly fine. They learn new things because other people told them about it. Most of the time this works great. Sometimes small changes in the explanation can make a big difference, and the game of telephone can have big impacts on people’s perception of a thing. It’s almost certain that most people complaining haven’t read the explanation, and in this particular situation it’s an issue.

      Edit: opt-out shenanigans notwithstanding.

  • sudo42@lemmy.world
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    4 months ago

    What ever happened to micro transactions? Weren’t they supposed to be the way we compensated web producers? Instead we got ads.

    • makeasnek@lemmy.ml
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      4 months ago

      The question is, how do we pay content creators? Websites? Etc. Nostr has a potential solution. In the last two months, their users “zapped” aka tipped nearly a million dollars ($950k) to content creators on their platform. And it doesn’t just make it easy to pay content creators, but to also put a portion of your “zaps” towards the relay you use or development of the software if you want. If you have a nostr account, you can easily tie it to a lightning address to send/receive tips, nostr doesn’t take a fee. Relays can also portion out a bit of their zaps for the people who publish the most engaging content on their relay. The possibilities are quite extensive. And because it’s over lightning, zaps happen instantly and for pennies or less in fees. And you could expand this infrastructure from just tweets to web browsing as well. In nostr, as you could in theory for the rest of the web, you can say “I want to donate $5 a month, split it up among all the posts I liked”. Though, you can use nostr without zaps at all.

      For those unfamiliar with nostr, it’s a decentralized social media software much like ActivityPub/mastodon, the main use right now is as a twitter/instagram clone but there’s also a reddit-style section being built up as well. Moderation abilities from the perspective of the instance/relay are identical to activitypub/mastodon. But one bonus if that if your relay goes down, you don’t lose your identity, since your identity and relay are separate. And if you change apps or relays (you are typically connected to multiple relays), all your content moves with you seamlessly. And the payment/zap infrastructure is all decentralized, relays don’t ever custody or manage the payments. If you tip a content creator, it goes directly from you to them. The lightning network has basically limitless transaction capacity. If you have cash app, it supports lightning, so you can already send zaps (you will need different apps to receive zaps though because cash app doesn’t support the LNURL standard). Strike natively supports it. And because it’s lightning, it works in every country automatically.

      Long-term, if I am a content creator, which “fedi”-type system is going to be attractive to me? One where users can send me tips and mircopayments or one where they can’t? This is why I think nostr is going to win out long-term over AP/Mastodon. Mastodon could add this kind of functionality but I don’t get the impression they’re open to it. People may not want to commit to yet another $5/month subscription to a YouTuber’s patreon or nebula or whatever, but they are happy to tip 1-10c after watching a video. So there’s a psychological beauty to micropayments as well. As some random person I have made like 7c on tips this month, but I’ve also given out plenty to other people.