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Visited Porn? Web Browser Flaw Secretly Bares All

JORDAN ROBERTSON   12/ 5/10 03:16 PM ET   AP

Porn

SAN FRANCISCO — Dozens of websites have been secretly harvesting lists of places that their users previously visited online, everything from news articles to bank sites to pornography, a team of computer scientists found.

The information is valuable for con artists to learn more about their targets and send them personalized attacks. It also allows e-commerce companies to adjust ads or prices – for instance, if the site knows you've just come from a competitor that is offering a lower price.

Although passwords aren't at risk, in harvesting a detailed list of where you've been online, sites can create thorough profiles on its users.

The technique the University of California, San Diego researchers investigated is called "history sniffing" and is a result of the way browsers interact with websites and record where they've been. A few lines of programming code are all a site needs to pull it off.

Although security experts have known for nearly a decade that such snooping is possible, the latest findings offer some of the first public evidence of sites exploiting the problem. Current versions of the Firefox and Internet Explorer browsers still allow this, as do older versions of Chrome and Safari, the researchers said.

The report adds to growing worry about surreptitious surveillance by Internet companies and comes as federal regulators in the U.S. are proposing a "Do Not Track" tool that would prevent advertisers from following consumers around online to sell them more products.

The researchers found 46 sites, ranging from smutty to staid, that tried to pry loose their visitors browsing histories using this technique, sometimes with homegrown tracking code. Nearly half of the 46 sites, including financial research site Morningstar.com and news site Newsmax.com, used an ad-targeting company, Interclick, which says its code was responsible for the tracking.

Interclick said the tracking was part of an eight-month experiment that the sites weren't aware of. The New York company said it stopped using the technique in October because it wasn't successful in helping match advertisers to groups of Internet users. Interclick emphasized that it didn't store the browser histories.

Morningstar said it ended its relationship with Interclick when it found out about the program, and NewsMax said it didn't know that history sniffing had been used on its users until The Associated Press called. NewsMax said it is investigating.

The researchers studied far more sites – a total of the world's 50,000 most popular sites – and said many more behaved suspiciously, but couldn't be proven to use history sniffing. Nearly 500 of the sites studied had characteristics that suggested they could infer browsers' histories, and more than 60 transferred browser histories to the network. But the researchers said they could only prove that 46 had done actual "history hijacking."

"Browser vendors should have fixed this a long time ago," said Jeremiah Grossman, an Internet security expert at WhiteHat Security Inc., which wasn't involved in the study. "It's more evidence that we not only needed the fix, but that people really should upgrade their browsers. Most people wouldn't know this is possible."

The latest versions of Google Inc.'s Chrome and Apple Inc.'s Safari have automatic protections for this kind of snooping, researchers said. Mozilla Corp. said the next version of Firefox will have the same feature, adding that a workaround exists for some older versions as well.

Microsoft Corp. noted that Internet Explorer users can enable a private browsing mode that prevents the browser from logging the user's history, which prevents this kind of spying. But private browsing also strips away important benefits of the browser knowing its own history, such as displaying Google links you've visited in different colors than those you haven't.

"It's surprising, the lifetime that this fundamental a privacy violation can stick around," said Hovav Shacham, an assistant professor of computer science and engineering at UC San Diego and one of the paper's authors.

Internet companies are obsessed with tracking users' behavior so they can target their ads better. Uproar has prompted the Federal Trade Commission to propose rules that would limit advertisers' ability to track Internet users to show them advertisements. The "Do Not Track" tool the commission is proposing could eventually take the form of a browser setting that tells advertisers which visitors are off limits; such a setting, though, wouldn't necessarily block history sniffing.

History sniffing is essentially a side-by-side comparison of Web pages you've already visited with Web pages that a particular site wants to see if you've visited. If there's a match, users likely would never know, but the site administrators would learn a lot about their audiences.

For instance, a popular porn site was checking its visitors' histories to see if they'd visited 23 other pornography sites, and the code used on the Morningstar and NewsMax.com sites looked for matches against 48 specific Web pages, all related to Ford automobiles.

Sites can carry on this kind of inspection very quickly. Grossman said modern programs can check as many as 20,000 Internet addresses per second.

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This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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conservicide
I don't play nice.
10:52 PM on 12/20/2010
trace politicians and corporate heads for their patronage of prostitution.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
KsWrangler
06:35 PM on 12/08/2010
Gee, I wonder who else does this.? Why is it every time I come to HP I get ads tailored to the websites I visit?
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Craig 212
Tide goes in, tide goes out.
12:25 AM on 12/09/2010
I noticed the same thing at Facebook as well, one of the few times I visited the place.
10:40 AM on 12/08/2010
What about this, HP?

"The lawsuit argues that such snooping is against California’s consumer protection laws and “violates Plaintiffs’ privacy interests.” YouPorn isn’t the only site reading your history, either. Academic researchers have found 46 sites using the same or similar technology, including heavyweights like Wired, PerezHilton, the Huffington Post, Technocrati, and the Sun."
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
spoonerrothbard
I Wannabe elite, Obama 2012!!!!!!
01:37 PM on 12/08/2010
beat me to it.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ArjenBoatsma
No such thing as too much coffee.
08:36 AM on 12/08/2010
http://www.newser.com/story/107058/users-sue-youporn-for-spying-on-them.html

"Academic researchers have found 46 sites using the same or similar technology, including heavyweights like Wired, PerezHilton, the Huffington Post, Technocrati, and the Sun."
01:28 AM on 12/07/2010
If one defines porn as not having any socially redeeming value, than Newsmax certainly meets that definition. I certainly wouldn't want my browser to be contaminated with Newsmax cookies.
11:20 PM on 12/06/2010
As far as these trackers and spies go, DIE!
09:29 PM on 12/06/2010
Me? Porn? Never!
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Bogey907
Mongo only pawn... in game of life
11:16 AM on 12/08/2010
I was only doing "research"!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
JackHoffman
Pundit
07:53 PM on 12/06/2010
Who's the fat guy wearing glasses in the picture?
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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kcinpa
Stop the insanity: PEOPLE before corporations!!!!!
10:38 PM on 12/06/2010
I don't know, but the rotation at which that woman's head is attached to her body really scares me...
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Json
Cynical dreamer, sarcastic idealist...
01:18 PM on 12/07/2010
Looks like Newman from Seinfeld
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Pleasedontdelete
Silent compliance is no longer a valid course of a
07:30 PM on 12/06/2010
•Delete your cookies!
•Set the amount of time your system keeps cookies to zero days.
•If you're on firefox, goto tools/privet browsing.
•If you're on Chrome open an "Incognito" window.
•If you're using explorer, ask yourself why you're still using explorer!

You have to allow cookies to load a website, but you don't have to keep them on your system after leaving a site!
08:17 PM on 12/06/2010
Last bullet: As St. Barnie says A..Awesome....faved
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DRaymond
Network administrator, voiceovers
10:11 PM on 12/06/2010
This 'flaw' does not use cookies.  It uses your internet history, and it can only test for a specific page, so usually it is only testing for top level home pages for sites.  So if you visited a site via a direct link to a sub-page it might very well not reveal it. and then it does nothing to reveal querystring, which is where really revealing information would reside.
 
So when it comes to the real reason why you might be concerned about someone learning of your internet history the exposure from this is minimal.  The big threats still come from sites and e-mails that try to trick you into installing some sort of executable program.  Those can provide doors into your real internet history and your seriously private information.
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AmigaMan
Your micro-bio will never meet our guidelines.
08:03 AM on 12/08/2010
I use Safari on the Mac. If you enable Private Browsing no cookies or history are recorded during the session. I just checked my history - zero.

Plus, I run MacScan2 once a week on Sundays to detect any tracking cookies. I delete any I find immediately.
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05:18 PM on 12/06/2010
"While investigating several sites that installed event handlers, we also found that the huffingtonpost.com site exhibits suspicious behavior. In particular, every article on the site’s front page has an on- mouse-over event handler. These handlers collect in a global data structure information about what articles the mouse passes over."
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Jon Mendoza
01:10 PM on 12/06/2010
Beware, Kinect buyers! Your Xbox will now start watching you too!
12:22 PM on 12/06/2010
given time this too shall pass....
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
12:00 PM on 12/06/2010
If we could trust each other to act ethically, then this would not necessarily be a bad thing.
07:13 PM on 12/06/2010
Huh?
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06:40 PM on 12/07/2010
If I did not have to worry about being ripped off or spied on, then it would be nice if internet companies figure out what I am looking for should I desire such service.
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Fretslayer
I don't waste my time reading replies from NeoCons
11:56 AM on 12/06/2010
If your TV set or telephone spied on your activity (and reported it back to sellers and other people seeking to exploit you through your activity) how many people in America would stand for that?

So, why then do we put up with it when it comes to our Internet activity?
As time moves forward, more and more people are turning from TV and telephone (as well as snail mail) and turning toward the Net. Should we not be protected here just as we are in those other areas?
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JackHoffman
Pundit
07:51 PM on 12/06/2010
Because most people are simply stupid.
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Fretslayer
I don't waste my time reading replies from NeoCons
02:49 PM on 12/08/2010
"Simply Stupid" The new fragrance from $arah Palin.
11:51 AM on 12/06/2010
Wanna Do An Experiment to see the "Reality" of this "Address"..(the "Word" "Si(redacted)te" now Inexplicably seems to be enough to Trigger "Disappearance" from the "Discussion")..wanna see the Reality of whats being done to you as you read this?

Well..actually..this will work if you have Firefox..for "Windows"..is Designed to Allow for Corporate/Government Surveillance..one of the reasons its so slow and..awful!

So..Firefox users:

Try using "Private Browser" Mode on this..Address!

Go for it!

Hope you have..Allot..of Time!

Because you'll be "Okaying" dozens..literally..Dozens..Multiple Dozens..of "Do You Accept This.." Cookie..Ad Click..Data Mining..ad infinitum.

Oh..and if you "Don't Accept" this..:"Addresses" attempts to Track everything you do?

It Will Not Allow You To Continue!

This above "Story"..is one of a Growing Handful of such..overt..hypocrisy..that they're approaching the "Line" where they become in fact Deceptions!

From "Discussions" about "Ce(redacted)ip" to "Fre(redacted) of Sp(redacted)"..to naming this "Si(redacted)"..

From "Discussions" about Privacy Invasion..snooping..data mining..

From "Discussions" about "Money Controlling Politics"..

And "Tax Protest"? Well..thats often enough to get you "Reported"..as it conflicts with the "Narrative" of these "Pretend Outrages"!

Nope!

Sorry Folks!

But Where "You Are" Right This Moment..is just as Invasive and is conducting just as much Data Mining as the Article Above..apparently..seeks to "Expose"!

Sorry to burst the bubble!

Deny it if you wish!