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KoKo

(84,711 posts)
Wed Jan 28, 2015, 10:17 PM Jan 2015

Anyone Installed Firefox/Mozilla's New Ap: "Light Beam" helping track for Your Security?

Downloading it supposedly keeps track of third parties monitoring the web sites you visit and shares it with Mozilla. You have option to opt out.

It's funded by the Ford Foundation.

Anyone else get this Mozilla Notice? What do you think?

https://www.mozilla.org/en-US/lightbeam/

12 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
Highlight: NoneDon't highlight anything 5 newestHighlight 5 most recent replies

Erich Bloodaxe BSN

(14,733 posts)
1. I haven't yet, but it does sound like something I might want to.
Wed Jan 28, 2015, 10:27 PM
Jan 2015

If only so I can then add various places to my /etc/hosts file more easily and block their scripts.

MADem

(135,425 posts)
4. So the Ford Foundation is monitoring the monitors...?
Wed Jan 28, 2015, 10:48 PM
Jan 2015

Third parties "monitor" this site like a big dog--all those ads and so forth~!

KoKo

(84,711 posts)
5. Ford Foundation kind of flagged it for me...
Wed Jan 28, 2015, 10:50 PM
Jan 2015

Thats why I asked. Thought some more techy that I am might have some insight into Mozilla doing this and Ford Foundation sponsoring. I thought it sounded interesting...but Ford Foundation?

Hopefully someone who has checked it out will respond here.

Zorra

(27,670 posts)
6. Yes, thanks, KoKo. Read some reviews of it right after I saw your post
Wed Jan 28, 2015, 10:53 PM
Jan 2015

and then installed it. So far so good.

 

randome

(34,845 posts)
8. "So far so good" meaning it is successfully keeping you from being tracked? How would you ever know?
Thu Jan 29, 2015, 10:08 AM
Jan 2015

Or "So far so good" it didn't just trash your PC?
[hr][font color="blue"][center]"If you're bored then you're boring." -Harvey Danger[/center][/font][hr]

KoKo

(84,711 posts)
7. Kick to see if anyone else has installed it...
Thu Jan 29, 2015, 09:59 AM
Jan 2015

or wonder why the Ford Foundation would sponsor it. Seemed a bit odd for an AP for Mozilla to have a foundation sponsor it.

 

Bluenorthwest

(45,319 posts)
9. The Ford Foundation was founded by Edsel Ford in the 1930s and they fund lots of things I support
Thu Jan 29, 2015, 10:27 AM
Jan 2015

in human rights, LGBT rights, reproductive freedom, the arts, education and sustainable development. This particular effort is not unusual for them at all.
http://www.fordfoundation.org/about-us/mission


KoKo

(84,711 posts)
10. Why would a Security Tracking Ap be of interest to them, though?
Thu Jan 29, 2015, 10:32 AM
Jan 2015

What are they going to use it for? Would they be data mining the information they collect

 

Bluenorthwest

(45,319 posts)
11. They give grant money. They like the idea of citizens with secure internet. Freedom of expression
Thu Jan 29, 2015, 10:41 AM
Jan 2015

is one of the primary areas of focus for the Foundation. Do you, no offense, understand what such a Foundation does? Did you look at the link? Here's another one, awards they gave to Visionaries to mark their 75th anniversary. Check out who they lauded and why:
http://www.fordfoundation.org/about-us/visionaries-awards

Here's one example:
GADO
Syndicated Editorial Cartoonist Nairobi, Kenya

Godfrey Mwampembwa, better known by his pen name GADO, is the most syndicated political cartoonist in Eastern and Central Africa. Through his cartoons and satirical TV series, 'The XYZ Show,' he has increased awareness of social and political issues, encouraged public participation in discussions about governance and reminded elected officials of their responsibility to the public.

Another:
Bryan Stevenson
Founder and Executive Director, Equal Justice Initiative (EJI) Montgomery, Alabama

Bryan Stevenson challenges the fundamental injustice of poverty and fights bias against people of color and the poor in the criminal justice system. Through the Equal Justice Initiative, he advocates on behalf of juvenile offenders, poor people denied effective representation or wrongly convicted or charged, and others whose experiences with the criminal justice system have been marked by bias or misconduct. Stevenson teaches law at NYU and has written extensively on criminal justice, capital punishment and civil rights issues.

KoKo

(84,711 posts)
12. Seems to be a Ford Foundation Experimental Grant...
Thu Jan 29, 2015, 12:45 PM
Jan 2015
The tension between transparency
and online user privacy


We believe that the Add-on and the Lightbeam data server together make up an effective strategy to raise awareness regarding third party behaviour and ultimately may contribute to changing policy. However, the inherent tension between increasing transparency and protecting online user privacy complicates our task. This tension can be characterized as follows: collecting and showing data about third parties requires exposing data about how people use the web, which in turn may give tracking agents even more data to effectively track their users. In other words, the more data we expose publicly about third parties, the more data we expose about web users in general, and the more likely third party trackers - which we aim to expose - will use Lightbeam data to more effectively target and track online users. Avoiding this potential arms race required us to consult closely with the Mozilla privacy team and others to mitigate the potential risk to online privacy while allowing us to exploit the benefits of collecting aggregated Lightbeam data. In short, the tension between transparency and online user privacy has and will continue to require constant and cautious attention, but is possible to overcome given the following approach.

Our original proposal included building an Application Programming Interface (API) to enable anyone to access third party data from Lightbeam users who submit their data to public server. Upon review, we realized that without implementing careful restrictions, third parties would easily be able use the crowd-sourced Lightbeam data to increase their knowledge about Lightbeam users, by specifically correlating the behavior in their databases (which span some sites for all the sites’ users) with the data in Lightbeam (which spans all sites for some users). We address this issue by implementing an API that gives access only aggregated data, to encourage users to visualize the state of tracking on the web as an aggregate, but restricts access to the fine-grained data to trusted privacy researchers and others with whom a contractual relationship can be established to make abuse of the data unlikely. While this approach seems on first blush to fly in the face of the open data policy to which we normally adhere, we believe that protecting Lightbeam users’ privacy is worth the trade - off.

Data overload means that meaningful
visualizations beg for contextualization


One of the first issues we noticed with the initial visualization is that with even a few hours of data collected, the graph of “colluders” was so dense that it became scary, rather than informative. It was impossible for a user to make sense of the graph. In the revised Lightbeam, a common theme is that of context. The user is invited to select a context either by specifying a time range (a day, a week, etc.), a third party site (and then understanding the span of time and sites that the third party had visibility over), or a website (and then understanding the set of parties involved in tracking behavior on that site).


1. The Lightbeam add-on, which enables individual users to see who they are connecting to in real time, and -

2. A publicly available server of aggregated Lightbeam data collected through the willing participation of Lightbeam users who are interested in promoting further research in the field of online tracking and privacy.

This two-pronged approach gives people the tools to make decisions about their online privacy while at the same time providing a valuable and open community research platform that can reveal patterns.
connected themselves to your online activity.

Goals for the project included making it easy for people to make sense of their own browsing data, to expose relationships between websites and third parties - which normally remain hidden - and ultimately to give people the tools to make their own decisions about their online privacy.

Toward these goals we adopted three main design approaches to engage users possessing various levels of technical knowledge and interest in privacy issues. The first approach engages people with little technical knowledge by giving them a tool to view and explore their own personal internet browsing history.

The second enables those already knowledgeable about privacy issues to find relationships, patterns and trends among third party sites and the web sites that enable them. The third lets users act on what they find in the Lightbeam data in real time. Together these three interfaces would empower users to take control over their own online privacy and perhaps take a step towards changing our expectations and policies toward how and when people watch us across the Web.


visualizations


The team explored multiple visualizations beyond the original network graph of the first Lightbeam visualization, and built various conceptual models which ideally would exist in all browsers, so that third parties could be laid on top of a pre-existing conceptual and visual language.

opportunities and implications

During the conceptual phase of the project the team started testing the visualizations based on certain hypothesis. New factors to be considered emerged.

Some dealt with the scope of the application and implications and opportunities with the user interface. For example, how can we visualize the use of multiple tabs according to browsing history, how can we navigate through time? What is the best way to isolate data and create notification systems relating to ambient, audio or visual triggers?

Another focus area was on the application programming interface and how to convey different elements of online tracking. How should we represent cookies and the connections between cookies and websites? Should cookies be grouped according to the domain that issued them? What is the best way to display the action-reaction relationship between user behaviour and tracking?

And in another way, we needed to look at the motivation a user might have to activate the application in an ongoing way. What could we do to make Lightbeam an everyday tool? What are the key things a user would want to know? Where are the most evocative triggers?

Hypotheses

After raising questions and addressing key issues, we formed the following hypotheses to explore:

design axis
We identified the following set of axes on which we based the Lightbeam interface design. Some of these included:
personal vs. global perspective
generic vs. customized
static vs. deep time
opacity vs. transparency
ambient vs. direct attention
clustered vs. spacious
semantic vs. graphic
narrative vs. emergent


hypothesis #1
Exploring my browsing history
Users would like to see their browsing history as a hook to show tracking.

hypothesis #2
Dive into deep time
Users would benefit from seeing their data over time.
hypothesis #3

Simple Lightbeam metric as widget
Users find it easy and useful to read metrics as single numbers and simple graphs.
what is online tracking?


In order to develop an initial understanding of online tracking the visualization team designed animations. This method of visualization became helpful as we developed a visual language and delved deeper into how to represent online tracking.

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