179
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
this post was submitted on 18 Oct 2024
179 points (99.4% liked)
privacy
2996 readers
1 users here now
Big tech and governments are monitoring and recording your eating activities. c/Privacy provides tips and tricks to protect your privacy against global surveillance.
Partners:
- community.nicfab.it/c/privacy
founded 2 years ago
MODERATORS
For anyone who wants to take this seriously but doesn't know what to do:
TL;DR: Chop off everything after the question mark.
Usually these trackers are at the end of the URL, after a ?. That's called the "query string parameters" of the URL, and it's where developers will attach extra information for the server or page. Often, those are benign and useful: It's a token that identifies you to the server, or it's context about what you're trying to do. Sometimes you can eyeball the query string params and guess what they do, e.g.:
coolvideos.com/videos/5432?fullscreen=true&autoplay=true&time=12021
or
cheapshoes.com/search?query=adidas+tennis&category=womens&filter=discounted
or
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=dQw4w9WgXcQ
If you chopped off everything after the question mark, the URL should still work, it'd just give you a default version of that page. In these examples, there would be no privacy risk to sharing the URLs somewhere.
But query string params are also where alot of marketing/tracking bullshit goes. When you see URLs with UTM params like "utm_medium" and "utm_campaign", that's marketing bullshit. They can also contain info about who you are, like what OP is describing: If it's some kind of referral link for example, then it might look like pyramidscheme.com/special-offer?associate_id=455&source=facebook. It might be esoteric too, like the "igsh" param in OP's post (which I assume is short for "Instagram share" or something?). That WOULD be a privacy concern.
So yeah... Often you can eyeball it and figure out what (if anything) to remove... And if in doubt, try chopping off the question mark and everything following it, and see if the URL still works.
But don't stop there, they can also put in some BS in the regular URL bit. Amazon does this, so my solution is to chop off segments between forward slashes and try the URL until it ends up not working, then paste the smallest version of the URL that works.
Or fire up incognito or a private window (or whatever your browser calls it) and search for it directly from the webpage. So for amazon, just open up amazon.com and search for the product name. Even if it has tracking BS, it'll be a lot less than if you used it from a window where you were logged in.
Yeah that's a good point about Amazon URLs. You really just need the product ID. So like Amazon produces this URL:
https://www.amazon.ca/Never-gonna-give-Vinyl-Single/dp/B0002ZFTJA/ref=mp_s_a_1_1?crid=3T6J1RB3LF&dib=eyJ2IjoiMSJ9.5sQbY5zPzdbue9EsKzMZE7SHj7nPANdCl_J6XYlqq_yok4wKDeTifb-f2gzzbvZs8gAqDNTybeJ6bDZgH9KHNEPF8fGkCtHu7s-5GiIfJQ8rIGg1HqsgK2kpXFxnIBF7nTu0Dx7CQtCc2ka8SIE6er5PbLzRjr2IZGSqqoFDD_CD9tfXyCeqFGtMV9QM8bM0YZY-iZa-5tw.feaM2FfrnmPiNE6eWtARgbqoGLfhkSfxvcNZI&dib_tag=se&keywords=rick+astley+never+gonna+give+you+up&qid=1729438753&sprefix=rick+astley+never+gonna+give+you+up%2Caps%2C165&sr=8-1
But I can pare that down to just this:
https://www.amazon.ca/dp/B0002ZFTJA/