Follow Slashdot blog updates by subscribing to our blog RSS feed

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
Privacy

Tracking Browsers Without Cookies Or IP Addresses? 265

Peter Eckersley writes "The EFF has launched a research project called Panopticlick, to determine whether seemingly innocuous browser configuration information (like User Agent strings, plugin versions and fonts) may create unique fingerprints that allow web users to be tracked, even if they limit or delete cookies. Preliminary results indicate that the User Agent string alone has 10.5 bits of entropy, which means that for a typical Internet user, only one in about 1,500 (2 ^ 10.5) others will share their User Agent string. If you visit Panopticlick, you can get a reading of how rare or unique your browser configuration is, as well as helping EFF to collect better data about this problem and how best to defend against it." I remember laughing years ago when I would see users who had modified their user agent string with some sort of defiant pro-privacy message, without realizing that their action made them uniquely identifiable out of hundreds of thousands of others.

Comment Re:That's not what MIP mapping was for: (Score 1) 192

There is also that little problem of texture memory. As was so elequently pointed out, you don't really want to swap MIP map levels in and out of texture memory. Using highly detailed base texures eats up that memory fast.

As we continue to purchase PCs with more and more main memory (did you ever think you'd get a Gig?), I am surprised at how long it has taken graphics card manufacturers (including SGI) to take the step beyond the precious 64Mb that has been standard for the past few years.

-Jeremy

Slashdot Top Deals

Prof: So the American government went to IBM to come up with a data encryption standard and they came up with ... Student: EBCDIC!"

Working...