this post was submitted on 19 Feb 2024
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chapotraphouse
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yeah I guess its not worth worrying about too much.
It is growing more common for operating systems to implement light/dark themes across the board. This is present in modern Windows, GNOME, and Android (at least), and this is made available to the browser, which makes it available to websites you visit. A lot of websites will automatically change between light and dark mode depending on what setting you have chosen at the OS level. While this is still an additional point which can be used for fingerprinting, it is a lot more common for people to set dark mode at the OS level than it is for people to install hyper-specific greasemonkey scripts. At least you'll blend in with a larger pool of users.
pretty sure librewolf blocks sites from reading the os color scheme. ended up just going with the midnight lizard extension and seems to be working well enough. while I do value my privacy I value not experiencing eye pain a little more.
which itself is another bit of identifying data: "this user responded 'shut up' to the theme question"
the modern internet is a privacy nightmare
The best way to be more private online is to use the TOR browser (as-is, dont add a bunch of add ons). Millions of people use it so fingerprinting is mostly useless, and Javascript is partly disabled by default (this is the secret sauce) plus it has the same list of built-in add ons as everyone else. On top of that it uses the Tor protocol, which is a little slow for streaming video or whatever but it's fine for basic browsing.
Downside is a lot of websites break without Javascript so it's a big annoyance, but if you're doing something you specifically want to be less traceable, then Tor browser is great.
This doesn't outweigh bad opsec though. If you're logged into Google, Microsoft, or Amazon, they don't even need to fingerprint you because you're identifying yourself.