Deep State, Anonymous & Warfare
Act 1. Once upon a time there was a Witch of the West.
Act 2. Purge the Secret Empire
Act 3.
"If they want to paint you as the villain, let them; just make sure you steal the show." — Criss Jami
https://t.co/ZkFodYxa9E
4. Actually in your main browser is where your main identity is. That's where you are going to stay logged into Google or other services through Google. use a separate browser for other accounts and activities.
Do people still use Facebook? Lol
Deleting cookies doesn't stop advertisers from tracking you.
cookies were the dominant tracking method until browsers started blocking them. advertisers adapted. the current toolkit:
— browser fingerprinting: 300+ attributes identify your browser uniquely. no cookie needed.
— supercookies: tracking data stored in ETags, LocalStorage, IndexedDB, and browser cache. survive cookie deletion.
— CNAME cloaking: third-party trackers disguised as first-party domains to bypass blockers.
— login-based tracking: if you're logged into Google or Facebook, your identity follows you across every site with their embedded scripts. no cookie required.
— device fingerprinting: your IP, OS, screen resolution, and hardware combine into a persistent identifier.
what actually reduces tracking
1. Browser choice matters most. Firefox with uBlock Origin blocks more than Chrome with any extension. Brave has built-in fingerprint randomization. Some privacy folks advise avoiding Chromium-based browsers entirely.
2. uBlock Origin in medium mode. blocks third-party scripts by default. most effective single extension for tracking prevention.
3. Firefox's Total Cookie Protection. isolates cookies per site so they can't be used to track you across sites. Enabled by default since Firefox 103.
4. Don't stay logged into Google or Facebook in your main browser. use a separate profile or browser for those accounts.
5. For serious privacy: Mullvad Browser. pre-configured Firefox forks with fingerprint resistance built in.
A class action says Meta used your posts, photos, messages, and behavior— across all its platforms —to train its AI models.
No clear disclosure this could happen.
No real way to opt out.
You didn't consent to being training data.
You just didn't delete your account in time.
Of course, now we publish, it goes viral, then Apple fixes it quietly in the next update. It happened before. At least it is not a duplicate 💪
Any tech journalists interested in covering this bug, please reach out. We're gonna do an embargo before we publish the blog
I don't care who you are
Where you're from, what you did
As long as you love me
Who you are, where you're from
Don't care what you did
As long as you love me
A little celebration, Zu.
🎻