mirror of
https://git.sr.ht/~seirdy/seirdy.one
synced 2024-11-23 21:02:09 +00:00
Clarification on exclusion from cohort calculation
Being excluded from cohort calculation doesn't necessarily make users less unique.
This commit is contained in:
parent
2ae6abbd82
commit
d01bcc1971
2 changed files with 10 additions and 2 deletions
|
@ -33,7 +33,11 @@ As per a post on Google's web development blog, web.dev, FLoC also will be enabl
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
## What explicitly opting out actually entails
|
## What explicitly opting out actually entails
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
What adding this header does is exclude your website from being used when calcualting a user's cohort. Cohorts are calculated locally from browsing history; sites that send this header will be excluded from this calculation. This may or may not reduce the entropy gained by a FLoC ID, depending on how well or poorly your site serves as an identifier. Given this marginal improvement, I don't think it's right to place a burden or blame on webmasters when the burden and blame should rightfully be directed at those responsible for rolling this antifeature out in Chromium. We shouldn't expect webmasters to add a tag or header every time Google advances the war against its own users.
|
What adding this header does is exclude your website from being used when calcualting a user's cohort. A cohort is an identifier shared with a few thousand other users, calculated locally from browsing history; sites that send this header will be excluded from this calculation. The EFF estimates that a cohort ID can add up to 8 bits of of entropy to a user's fingerprint.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
Being excluded from cohort calculation has a chance to place a user in a different cohort, altering a user's fingerprint. This new fingerprint may or may not have more entropy than the one derived without being excluded.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
Given this marginal improvement, I don't think it's right to place a burden or blame on webmasters when the burden and blame should rightfully be directed at those responsible for rolling this antifeature out in Chromium. We shouldn't expect webmasters to add a tag or header every time Google advances the war against its own users.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
## How Permissions Policy works
|
## How Permissions Policy works
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
|
|
@ -32,7 +32,11 @@ As per a [post](https://web.dev/floc/) on Google's web development blog, web.dev
|
||||||
What explicitly opting out actually entails
|
What explicitly opting out actually entails
|
||||||
-------------------------------------------
|
-------------------------------------------
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
What adding this header does is exclude your website from being used when calcualting a user's cohort. Cohorts are calculated locally from browsing history; sites that send this header will be excluded from this calculation. This may or may not reduce the entropy gained by a FLoC ID, depending on how well or poorly your site serves as an identifier. Given this marginal improvement, I don't think it's right to place a burden or blame on webmasters when the burden and blame should rightfully be directed at those responsible for rolling this antifeature out in Chromium. We shouldn't expect webmasters to add a tag or header every time Google advances the war against its own users.
|
What adding this header does is exclude your website from being used when calcualting a user's cohort. A cohort is an identifier shared with a few thousand other users, calculated locally from browsing history; sites that send this header will be excluded from this calculation. The EFF estimates that a cohort ID can add up to 8 bits of of entropy to a user's fingerprint.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
Being excluded from cohort calculation has a chance to place a user in a different cohort, altering a user's fingerprint. This new fingerprint may or may not have more entropy than the one derived without being excluded.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
Given this marginal improvement, I don't think it's right to place a burden or blame on webmasters when the burden and blame should rightfully be directed at those responsible for rolling this antifeature out in Chromium. We shouldn't expect webmasters to add a tag or header every time Google advances the war against its own users.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
How Permissions Policy works
|
How Permissions Policy works
|
||||||
----------------------------
|
----------------------------
|
||||||
|
|
Loading…
Reference in a new issue