A user created a thread in this lemmy community remarking that the Tor Browser has a personally identifiable fingerprint under normal settings (the “Standard” and “Safer” modes make you fingerprintable), with several commenters doing the same test and reporting the same. The user who created this post also said that on the privacy guides forum posts about this topic are being deleted.

The poster could try to provide proof. Has at least one of these posts been archived (on archive.is or archive.org)?

  • PierceTheBubble@lemmy.world
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    3 days ago

    I ran it 5 times and all IDs (dZP06FnaUjtPOYh0s6Xy, Gp4E34k89Kox5ZS0HsRr, Al0HFjDTTEOGlUasncXa, ZCfnXPFd08a2c0ZtplPT, 0UPk10WDNg6BEAElMReI) are different. Most mentioning me being a first time visitor, unlike the second uniquely being 6th time visitor. So I haven’t been able to reproduce it.

  • ThisIsABlandUsername@lemmy.ml
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    10 days ago

    Tor and Mullvad to a lesser extent don’t try to erase all fingerprints. They try to normalize the ones that can’t be hidden. So your fingerprints will be randomized within a pool of choices and everyone using Tor or Mullvad shares the same pool. So instead of trying to disappear, you try to blend into the crowd. They can see you, they just can’t tell you apart from the person next to you because your browsers are all broadcasting the same information.

  • f3nyx@lemmy.ml
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    10 days ago

    If the post is getting deleted on one forum, they should post the findings somewhere else. that thread smells FUDdy to me

  • zelnix@lemmy.ml
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    10 days ago

    That’s irrelevant. The whole idea of the Tor browser is that everyone using it has the same fingerprint. Having different fingerprints breaks one of the tenants of using it

    • liminal@lemmy.mlOP
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      10 days ago

      Sorry, I meant personally identifiable. They found out the fingerprint is computer-specific.