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Forums » After Charter's Decision To Drop NebuAD, Will Other ISPs Follow? » What about Google?
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One More ISP to add to the list of ISPs »

TKJunkMail
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Re: What about Google?

said by swhx7 See Profile :

Google's whole system relies on seb-surfers making requests to their domain for scripts, accepting their cookies, or both. Anyone who cares to find out the very simple precautions can opt out of it completely.

On the other hand, in some areas it's impossible to get broadband internet without 100% of one's traffic being intercepted and data-mined by the Nebuad machine (whether it serves the ads or not).

That's a huge difference.
You can block nebuad data collection as well. The difference is merely one of how to go about stopping the collection. You are defending Google because of their PR machine pushing their "Google the Good" reputation. They are much more a danger to privacy than Nebuad ever will be.
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Re: What about Google?

No, you can't block data collection, you can only block the display of advertising utilizing that data.

You get watched regardless.

Google may be just as bad, but I have a choice in deleting persistent cookies placed by Google and not using their services. I can also elect to block *.google.com so sites using their Adwords service can't send me there either.

Not so with Nebuad. They are like a the Verizon guy standing behind you listening to every freaking word of the telephone conversation, and you can't get rid of him.

Furthemore, Google isn't putting their data into third-party pages. Nebuad injects javascript into everyone's pages.

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Re: What about Google?

said by clickie See Profile :

Furthemore, Google isn't putting their data into third-party pages. Nebuad injects javascript into everyone's pages.
This is what I mean about uninformed statements (not to pick on you in particular). Google does put their data on 3rd party pages. In fact, those 3rd parties actually incorportate the Google tracking mechanism without you realizing.

said by Google Analytics :

Google Analytics is implemented by including what is known as a "page tag". This is referred to as the Google Analytics Tracking Code (GATC) and is a hidden snippet of JavaScript code that the user adds onto every page of their website. This code acts as a beacon, collecting anonymous visitor data and sending it back to Google data collection servers for processing. Data processing takes place hourly, though it can be 3-4 hours in arrears of real time.

To function, the GATC loads a larger file from the Google webserver and then sets variables with the user's account number. The larger file (currently known as ga.js) is typically 18 KB in size and is only downloaded once at the start of the visit as it will be cached throughout the session. As all websites that implement GA with the ga.js code are using the same master file from Google, a visitor that has previously visited any other website with this code implemented, will also have the file cached on their machine. The result is that the page overhead of including the GATC on your web pages is kept to a minimum.

In addition to broadcasting information to Google servers, the GATC sets first party cookies on each visitor's computer. This is used to store anonymous information such as whether the visitor has been to the site before (new or returning visitor), what is the timestamp of the current visit and what was the referrer site or campaign the visitor came from e.g. search engine, keywords, banner, email etc.
Google does it all friend, Javascript included! Again, Nebuad isnt doing anything different than what Google and countless other search engines are doing today. While the methods are slightly different (but just as easy to block/opt out for those intelligent enough to figure out how), the end result is the same.
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If history teaches us anything, it teaches that simple-minded appeasement or wishful thinking about our adversaries is folly.
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swhx7
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Re: What about Google?

said by wifi4milez See Profile :

said by clickie See Profile :Furthemore, Google isn't putting their data into third-party pages. Nebuad injects javascript into everyone's pages.
This is what I mean about uninformed statements ... Google does put their data on 3rd party pages. In fact, those 3rd parties actually incorportate the Google tracking mechanism without you realizing.
... Nebuad isnt doing anything different than what Google and countless other search engines are doing today. While the methods are slightly different (but just as easy to block/opt out for those intelligent enough to figure out how), the end result is the same.

Unfortunately you are misunderstanding several things and the person you're replying to is correct.

1. Website owners contract with Google and put the Google tags in their own pages to get the benefits - ad revenue, analytics. Nebuad, however, adds javascript into pages and cookies into headers by forgery, without permission of website owners. Only some site owners contract for the Nebu-ized ads but all get their pages tagged on the way to the site visitor because that's how Nebuad builds the profiles on web users.

2. "those 3rd parties actually incorportate the Google tracking mechanism without you realizing" - Every major browser has a "view source" option. Anyone astute enough to be reading this can simply look and see whether there are links to Google stuff in the page.

3. "methods are slightly different (but just as easy to block/opt out for those intelligent enough to figure out how" - You can prevent your browser from ever retrieving a single cookie or script from Google by simply black-holing certain domains. Now explain, please, how the customer of a Nebuad-using ISP can prevent his traffic from going through the Nebuad machine? There's no way unless the ISP offers a true opt-out.

4. "Nebuad isnt doing anything different than what Google and countless other search engines are doing today" - When websites serve cookies and scripts on a "clean" (non-Nebu-ized ) internet connection , the user can accept or reject each item (or decide whether to let his browser request them in the first place), and can be confident that a request to a given server really retrieves only from that server. Nebuad (if it works like Phorm) intercepts 100% of a person's web traffic, coming and going, data-mines it and inserts foreign content forged to appear as coming from remote domains. Claiming that there isn't "anything different" between these scenarios is either ignorance or shilling for the spybox people.

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Re: What about Google?

said by swhx7 See Profile :

Unfortunately you are misunderstanding several things and the person you're replying to is correct.

1. Website owners contract with Google and put the Google tags in their own pages to get the benefits - ad revenue, analytics. Nebuad, however, adds javascript into pages and cookies into headers by forgery, without permission of website owners. Only some site owners contract for the Nebu-ized ads but all get their pages tagged on the way to the site visitor because that's how Nebuad builds the profiles on web users.
Correct. And ISP's contract with Nebuad for their ad revenue and analytics. No difference, other that who is getting paid.

said by swhx7 See Profile :

2. "those 3rd parties actually incorportate the Google tracking mechanism without you realizing" - Every major browser has a "view source" option. Anyone astute enough to be reading this can simply look and see whether there are links to Google stuff in the page.
I have bad news for you. If you have opened the page and then checked the "view source" option, then you have already loaded the Google code! All that enables you to do is check after the fact if Google had code embedded in the page. Furthermore, assuming you can find the Google specific code, what will you do then?

said by swhx7 See Profile :

3. "methods are slightly different (but just as easy to block/opt out for those intelligent enough to figure out how" - You can prevent your browser from ever retrieving a single cookie or script from Google by simply black-holing certain domains. Now explain, please, how the customer of a Nebuad-using ISP can prevent his traffic from going through the Nebuad machine? There's no way unless the ISP offers a true opt-out.
As has been discussed numerous times on this site, you can take measures to block Nebuad from tracking your data and serving you ads. Keep in mind that the company is also telling you that they arent doing anything with your data, and until that is proven false (or we have lots of evidence to the contrary) there is no reason to doubt them.

said by swhx7 See Profile :

4. "Nebuad isnt doing anything different than what Google and countless other search engines are doing today" - When websites serve cookies and scripts on a "clean" (non-Nebu-ized ) internet connection , the user can accept or reject each item (or decide whether to let his browser request them in the first place), and can be confident that a request to a given server really retrieves only from that server. Nebuad (if it works like Phorm) intercepts 100% of a person's web traffic, coming and going, data-mines it and inserts foreign content forged to appear as coming from remote domains. Claiming that there isn't "anything different" between these scenarios is either ignorance or shilling for the spybox people.
Even Karl pointed out that what you describe isnt happening here
--
If history teaches us anything, it teaches that simple-minded appeasement or wishful thinking about our adversaries is folly.
-Ronald Reagan-

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1 edit

Re: What about Google?

said by wifi4milez See Profile :

And ISP's contract with Nebuad for their ad revenue and analytics. No difference, other that who is getting paid.

Case 1: A sends B a message via messenger M, and agrees to include C's ad, and M delivers it unmolested. This is perfectly legitimate.

Case 2: A sends B a message via messenger M, with or without C's ad, and M opens it and reads it for benefit of D, without consent of either A or B. This is radically different. (The fact that D is "contracting for" this is irrelevant, it's still interference with other people's communications.)

said by wifi4milez See Profile :

I have bad news for you. If you have opened the page and then checked the "view source" option, then you have already loaded the Google code! All that enables you to do is check after the fact if Google had code embedded in the page. Furthermore, assuming you can find the Google specific code, what will you do then?

Wrong again. It's easiest to explain with an example. A request from my browser to pagead2.google.com may be issued by the browser, but will never get past my router. So the script is never retrieved, much less executed. But I can still look in the page source and see:

<script src="http://pagead2.google.com/ ... >

Besides, a user may load it one time, and block it on another occasion.

said by wifi4milez See Profile :

said by swhx7 See Profile : ...how [can] the customer of a Nebuad-using ISP can prevent his traffic from going through the Nebuad machine? There's no way unless the ISP offers a true opt-out.

... the company is also telling you that they arent doing anything with your data, and until that is proven false (or we have lots of evidence to the contrary) there is no reason to doubt them.



So now you're no longer denying the wholesale wiretapping, something profoundly different from websites serving cookies and scripts - but now you just defend it by saying it's harmless because you trust the spybox companies to "do no evil" (beyond the spying itself). But the spying itself is what a lot of people object to. I don't believe anything said by a company in such a sleazy business, either, but that's secondary. We shouldn't have to take their word for anything because they shouldn't be allowed in a position where they have the power to harvest all the data. Industry self-regulation has never worked for the protection of citizens in any scenario, ever.

said by wifi4milez See Profile :

Even Karl pointed out that what you describe isnt happening here

What Karl was saying there was that Nebuad doesn't replace ads that site owners have contracted for with other ads of its own. That is true. My point is that the user-tracking and proxying techniques involve the spybox impersonating sites, injecting cookies into headers, and appending javascripts - as explained in funchords' study and elsewhere - and intecepting communications of non-consenting others. This is indeed radically different from sites serving cookies and scripts. (And Karl, in the post you link to, agrees with me.)
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said by wifi4milez See Profile :

I have bad news for you. If you have opened the page and then checked the "view source" option, then you have already loaded the Google code! All that enables you to do is check after the fact if Google had code embedded in the page. Furthermore, assuming you can find the Google specific code, what will you do then?
All I get is this:
Wonder what gets activated in that?

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wifi4milez
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said by clickie See Profile :

No, you can't block data collection, you can only block the display of advertising utilizing that data.

You get watched regardless.
There was a user earlier this week who pointed out that you can in fact block all aspects of Nebuad. It involves placing their cookie on a black list of sorts, and then using Adblock. This prevents tracking and delivery of ads. I wont disagree that they need to have a clearly defined opt out procedure, in fact I would demand that they do. Realistically however, even if they dont you can still block them.
--
If history teaches us anything, it teaches that simple-minded appeasement or wishful thinking about our adversaries is folly.
-Ronald Reagan-

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Re: What about Google?

said by wifi4milez See Profile :

you can in fact block all aspects of Nebuad. It involves placing their cookie on a black list of sorts, and then using Adblock. This prevents tracking and delivery of ads.

It does prevent "tracking and delivery of ads", but this is not "all aspects of Nebuad". The interception of traffic is what a lot of us object to, not the ads.

TKJunkMail
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1 edit
said by wifi4milez See Profile :

There was a user earlier this week who pointed out that you can in fact block all aspects of Nebuad. It involves placing their cookie on a black list of sorts, and then using Adblock. This prevents tracking and delivery of ads. I wont disagree that they need to have a clearly defined opt out procedure, in fact I would demand that they do. Realistically however, even if they dont you can still block them.
You are correct. Given the way that Nebuad collects the info, it can be blocked. This thread ( »Consumer Groups Dig Inside NebuAD Technology ) has an extensive dialog on the subject where funchords(the author of the Nebuad study) admits that collection can be blocked - at least the way that Nebuad currently implements the collection process.
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Re: What about Google?

said by TKJunkMail See Profile :

You are correct. Given the way that Nebuad collects the info, it can be blocked. This thread ( »Consumer Groups Dig Inside NebuAD Technology ) has an extensive dialog on the subject where funchords(the author of the Nebuad study) admits that collection can be blocked - at least the way that Nebuad currently implements the collection process.
If I admitted anything, I was wrong. What I have done is report what NebuAd says about opting out. I can't test it, it would require an inspection of their device and code.

That said, I can't find any message in that Topic where I admitted that collection can be blocked. No matter -- because I probably said something like "NEBUAD SAYS IT WILL NOT SAVE your data if you opt-out." I'm not admitting it, nor lending or taking any credibility from it. I'm simply reporting what they say they do.

Hell, I think you pointed out that you can use a 3rd-party encrypting VPN which, to my knowledge, is the only sure way to escape the privacy risks of a NebuAd box inside your ISP. Even using SSL to every site you go to isn't a perfect solution, because they'll still know every site you go to.
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said by wifi4milez See Profile :

There was a user earlier this week who pointed out that you can in fact block all aspects of Nebuad. It involves placing their cookie on a black list of sorts, and then using Adblock. This prevents tracking and delivery of ads. I wont disagree that they need to have a clearly defined opt out procedure, in fact I would demand that they do. Realistically however, even if they dont you can still block them.
ACCORDING TO NEBUAD, the cookies prevent NebuAd's systems from storing information about you and its ad partners from delivering targeted ads to you. We have no choice but to trust them at their word.

The way that NebuAd is designed and deployed, it cannot possibly prevent the ad company from receiving your entire data stream from your ISP.

An acceptable system wouldn't work that way. It should be your choice whether any third party gets the chance to peer into your traffic.
--
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bigfussnothing

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Re: What about Google?

said by funchords See Profile :

An acceptable system wouldn't work that way. It should be your choice whether any third party gets the chance to peer into your traffic.
So you have proof that NebuAD is more than just a google ads technology. From what I read, you do have the option to opt out. It's just cookies, not the end of the world. Does anyone have the specs of these servers, or is the whole NebuAD debate pure opinion, and he said she said?

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Re: What about Google?

said by bigfussnothing :

So you have proof that NebuAD is more than just a google ads technology.
Yes - »www.freepress.net/files/NebuAd_Report.pdf

said by bigfussnothing :

From what I read, you do have the option to opt out.
You can opt-out any time that you like, but your ISP still sends every byte you see and send to them, regardless.

ACCORDING TO NEBUAD, you are only opting out of seeing targeted ads and NebuAd storing data about you. There is no mechanism to prevent your ISP from sending the data to this 3rd party with connections to Gator.

said by bigfussnothing :

It's just cookies, not the end of the world. Does anyone have the specs of these servers, or is the whole NebuAD debate pure opinion, and he said she said?
By the looks of your name, it seems that you have taken a position without looking at any facts -- then you took this opportunity to try to make a fool out of me.

NebuAd has responded and they have not contradicted the facts in my report. They, of course, don't agree with the general characterizations, and even injected some of their own mischaracterizations, but the essential facts are not in dispute.
--
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Re: What about Google?

So you don't have any specs on these servers. Thanks

funchords
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Re: What about Google?

In late 2007, they were using the Juniper E120. The specs are available on the intertubes.
Forums » After Charter's Decision To Drop NebuAD, Will Other ISPs Follow?One More ISP to add to the list of ISPs »


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