This project is a proof of concept that any website can identify and track you, even if you are using private browsing or incognito mode in your web browser. Many people think that they can hide their identity if they are using private browsing or incognito mode. This project will prove that they are wrong.
- Visit http://www.nothingprivate.ml and enter your name
- Click the "See the magic" button
- Visit the same website in Private browsing / Incognito mode
- See the magic β
Hope you are surprised! π Yes, the website can remember your name even if you had visited it via private browsing or incognito mode. Yes, nothing is private in this world anymore! This is what the big companies are doing with your identity. You think that going into private mode will wipe out all the traces? Absolutely not! In reality, using private browsing or incognito mode will just help you to clear your browsing history. Your internet service provider, search engines, and your favorite websites can still track you. They know your likes and dislikes. They use your data to earn money. The video below explains everything:
Yes, nothing is free...
One way to reduce the likelyhood of browser fingerprinting by using some of the browsers listed in the list of browsers implementing countermeasures curated by the community.
Browser fingerprinting is just an example of several ways that can be used to track your identity. For some others visit Freecodecamp blog. Here's a picture from the blog that explains the current situation:
- https://privatebrowsingmyths.com/
- https://panopticlick.eff.org/
- https://amiunique.org/
- https://www.pcworld.com/article/192648/browser_fingerprints.html
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Device_fingerprint
- https://nakedsecurity.sophos.com/2014/12/01/browser-fingerprints-the-invisible-cookies-you-cant-delete/
- https://spreadprivacy.com/browser-fingerprinting/
- https://time.com/4673602/terms-service-privacy-security/
- Google faces $5 billion lawsuit in U.S. for tracking 'private' internet use: You may already know about Google analytics if you are a web developer. In order to develop such a sophisticated tool, they need a lots of workforce. Why are they giving it away for free?. You are paying them with your and your user's data. You can easily switch to some open source alternatives like Matomo, but none of the self hosted alternatives provide availability and features as the google analytics. BuiltWith says that 69.5 percent of Quantcastβs Top 10,000 sites (based on traffic) are using Google Analytics and 54.6 percent of the top million websites that it tracks.
Nothing Private uses the browser fingerprinting feature of Client.js to obtain the fingerprint of your web browser. When you submit the form, this fingerprint is saved, along with your name in a MySQL database using PHP as a backend. The next time you visit the website your browser fingerprint is matched with the column in the database and your name is returned.
The current data points used for generating fingerprints are:
user agent, screen print, color depth, current resolution, available resolution, device XDPI, device YDPI, plugin list,
font list, local storage, session storage, timezone, language, system language, cookies, canvas print
Visit db_server for the server files. (See historical SQLite version of the backend code).
- Client.js Browser fingerprinting
- PHP
- MySQL Database
- JSON
- HTML & CSS
- Karma and Jasmine for unit testing
- Cypress for integration testing
Feel free to modify the code and open any pull requests. Also, be sure to read through the Contributing Guidelines
- Add more news article links
- Fix any typos
You can run nothing private locally via docker using the commands below:
git clone git@github.com:gautamkrishnar/nothing-private.git
cd nothing-private
docker-compose up -d # use --build to update image if you do 'git pull'
Visit http://localhost/
Special thanks to these rockstars:
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Thanks to the 200Kβ users.
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Thanks to IssueHunt for sponsoring this project:
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Thanks to DuckDuckGo for this tweet.
- Thanks to CloudFlare for their support and PRO Plan Sponsorship.
- Red Hat for the Openshift Pro plan sponsorship:
- BrowserStack for browser testing sponsorship:
- Sentry for error monitoring sponsorship:
- JetBrains for sponsoring the Open Source License to my favourite IDE WebStorm:
- 33giga.com.br for the blog post.
- Thanks to everyone who tweeted about this.
- Thanks to TechCycle for this demo video.
- Thanks to the @Mozilla community for discussing privacy issues. Some users even reported that nothing private is even working correctly with the latest version of Firefox Focus. They created an issue for it.
- https://softwarelivre.org/.
If you are having trouble using this project, please open a new issue and describe your problem.
Liked the project? Just give it a star β and spread the word!