GPN19:Analyzing the eMail Tracking Ecosystem: Unterschied zwischen den Versionen

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Ein Vortrag von @malexmave auf der [[GPN19]].
Ein Vortrag von @malexmave auf der [[GPN19]].


These days, tracking on websites is old news - we all know that it is happening, and we have our established defenses like ad blockers. However, website-based tracking tells only half the story, because many companies also track their eMails to see if you open them, and if you click any links. This area of online privacy has been mostly overlooked in the past, and not a lot of defenses exist.
These days, tracking on websites is old news - we all know that it is happening, and we have our established defenses like ad blockers. However, website-based tracking tells only half the story, because many companies also track their eMails to see if you open them, and if you click any links. This area of online privacy has been mostly overlooked in the past, and not a lot of defenses exist.


We're trying to at least make this tracking visible by building an automated eMail newsletter analysis platform that you can use right now to find out if your favourite newsletters are tracking you. Similar to our previous project on web tracking, the [PrivacyScore Platform](https://privacyscore.org) (previously presented at [MRMCD'17](https://media.ccc.de/v/DC9AG9)), we are looking to crowd-source a large dataset to establish a birds-eye view on the eMail tracking ecosystem. Anyone can sign up a new newsletter, and we will automatically analyze it and make the results available on our website, privacymail.info.
We’re trying to at least make this tracking visible by building an automated eMail newsletter analysis platform that you can use right now to find out if your favourite newsletters are tracking you. Similar to our previous project on web tracking, the [https://privacyscore.org PrivacyScore Platform] (previously presented at [https://media.ccc.de/v/DC9AG9 MRMCD’17]), we are looking to crowd-source a large dataset to establish a birds-eye view on the eMail tracking ecosystem. Anyone can sign up a new newsletter, and we will automatically analyze it and make the results available on our website, privacymail.info.


In this talk, we will give an introduction to eMail tracking, present the technology that powers the PrivacyMail system, and show first results from our analyses.
In this talk, we will give an introduction to eMail tracking, present the technology that powers the PrivacyMail system, and show first results from our analyses.
== Links ==


{{Navigationsleiste GPN19:Vorträge}}
{{Navigationsleiste GPN19:Vorträge}}

Aktuelle Version vom 29. Mai 2019, 12:28 Uhr

Ein Vortrag von @malexmave auf der GPN19.

These days, tracking on websites is old news - we all know that it is happening, and we have our established defenses like ad blockers. However, website-based tracking tells only half the story, because many companies also track their eMails to see if you open them, and if you click any links. This area of online privacy has been mostly overlooked in the past, and not a lot of defenses exist.

We’re trying to at least make this tracking visible by building an automated eMail newsletter analysis platform that you can use right now to find out if your favourite newsletters are tracking you. Similar to our previous project on web tracking, the PrivacyScore Platform (previously presented at MRMCD’17), we are looking to crowd-source a large dataset to establish a birds-eye view on the eMail tracking ecosystem. Anyone can sign up a new newsletter, and we will automatically analyze it and make the results available on our website, privacymail.info.

In this talk, we will give an introduction to eMail tracking, present the technology that powers the PrivacyMail system, and show first results from our analyses.

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