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Mozilla Firefox gets new anti-fingerprinting defenses

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Mozilla announced a major privacy upgrade in Firefox 145 that reduces even more the number of users vulnerable to digital fingerprinting.

The new protections will initially be available only in Private Browsing Mode and Enhanced Tracking Protection (ETP) Strict mode. After testing and optimization, they will be enabled by default in the Firefox web browser.

Fingerprinting is a tracking technique that allows tracking users' browsing activity and identifying them across websites and browser sessions, even when cookies are blocked or with private browsing active.

Subtle identifiers, like timezone, hardware and browser details, can be used to create a unique digital signature to identify users on the internet.

This type of data can be your browser's version, operating system, screen resolution and color depth, system language, installed fonts, time zone, GPU rendering behavior, CPU cores, touchscreen capabilities, and device memory.

Firefox’s existing anti-fingerprinting system, part of the software’s ‘Enhanced Tracking Protection’ mechanism, blocks many known tracking and fingerprinting scripts, most of which are intrinsically pervasive and not related to improving the user’s experience.

“Since 2021, Firefox has been incrementally advancing fingerprinting protections, covering the most pervasive fingerprinting techniques,” explains Mozilla.

“These include things like how your graphics card draws images, which fonts your computer has, and even tiny differences in how it performs math.”

These anti-fingerprinting blocks, which Mozilla marks as ‘Phase 1 Protections’ reduced trackability to roughly 35%, compared to the baseline 65% for now protections at all.

Now, ‘Phase 2’ protections are being rolled out, which block requests to discover installed fonts, hardware details, number of processor cores, multi-touch support, and dock/taskbar dimensions.

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