‘Fingerprinting’ to Track Us Online Is on the Rise. Here’s What to Do.

CreditCreditGlenn Harvey - The New York Times
CreditCreditGlenn Harvey - The New York Times
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‘Fingerprinting’ to Track Us Online Is on the Rise. Here’s What to Do.

CreditCreditGlenn Harvey - The New York Times
CreditCreditGlenn Harvey - The New York Times

If there’s one lesson to learn about digital privacy, it’s that we can never grow complacent. Even if we secure our data so we are not tracked online, the ad tech industry will find ways to monitor our digital activities.

And so it is with the rise of so-called fingerprinting, which security researchers are calling a next-generation tracking technology.

What is it exactly? Fingerprinting involves looking at the many characteristics of your mobile device or computer, like the screen resolution, operating system and model, and triangulating this information to pinpoint and follow you as you browse the web and use apps. Once enough device characteristics are known, the theory goes, the data can be assembled into a profile that helps identify you the way a fingerprint would.

“Get enough of those attributes together and it creates essentially a bar code,” said Peter Dolanjski, a product lead for Mozilla’s Firefox web browser, who is studying fingerprinting. “That bar code is absolutely uniquely identifiable.”

And here’s the bad news: The technique happens invisibly in the background in apps and websites. That makes it tougher to detect and combat than its predecessor, the web cookie, which was a tracker stored on our devices. The solutions to blocking fingerprinting are also limited.

Security researchers discovered fingerprinting as a tracking method about seven years ago, but it was rarely discussed until recently. Only about 3.5 percent of the most popular websites use it today for tracking, but that’s up from about 1.6 percent in 2016, according to Mozilla. And an unknown number of mobile apps also use fingerprinting.

All of this is not a reason to panic, but it is a reason to be concerned. As fingerprinting becomes more popular, here’s what you need to know about it and what we can do.
How did we get here?

Over the last few years, tech companies like Apple and Mozilla introduced aggressive privacy protections inside their web browsers. Tracker blocking is built into the Safari and Firefox browsers to make it harder for advertisers to follow us around the web and serve targeted ads. That thwarted traditional tracking methods like cookies and pixels that were embedded inside social media buttons.

Because many of those technologies became blocked by default, advertisers had to find a different way to track people.

How does fingerprinting work?

Let’s get technical for a moment. Fingerprinting takes advantage of a fundamental way that apps and websites talk to our devices.

When you browse the web, your browser automatically gives websites some information about your hardware. That’s partly because a website needs to know things like the resolution of your screen so it can load a page in the correct window size.

Similarly, when you install a mobile app, the operating system shares some information about your hardware with the app. That’s partly because an app needs to know what type of phone you use so it can adapt to the processor speed and screen size.

There are restrictions to the data that apps and websites can get about your device. On iPhones and Android phones, for example, you must give an app permission to gain access to your location data, your camera and microphone. Similarly, many browsers also require your permission before a website can have access to those sensors.

But fingerprinting collects seemingly innocuous characteristics that are generally shared by default to make apps and websites work properly.

With enough information gathered, fingerprinting can be very reliable. In a study last year in France, researchers found that about one-third of digital fingerprints they collected were unique and therefore identifiable. In a 2017 study, researchers at Lehigh University and Washington University tested a fingerprinting method that identified 99 percent of users.

Privacy advocates say fingerprinting is abusive because in contrast to cookies, which people can see and delete, you generally cannot tell it is happening and cannot opt out of it.

“It’s really a black box,” said Casey Oppenheim, the chief executive of Disconnect, a company that develops tracker blocking tools.
What can I do?

The solutions for preventing fingerprinting are relatively new, and some are still in development. It is hard to tell how effective they are since fingerprinting happens invisibly. But taking advantage of the solutions will give you peace of mind if you care about privacy.

Here are some solutions for blocking browser fingerprinting.

Apple users have protections in Safari for computers and mobile devices.

For those who use iPhones and Macs, Apple introduced a fingerprinting defense mechanism in its Safari browser last year. It basically makes many Macs and iPhones look the same to a website by sharing the bare minimum of information that the site need to load properly. (For example, if you are using MacOS 10.14.5, the browser will tell the website only that you are using MacOS 10.14.)

To take advantage of this defense, just make sure you are running a recent version of the iPhone and Mac operating systems.

Android users and Windows users can try the Firefox web browser.

Mozilla introduced fingerprint blocking in its Firefox browser this year, but the feature can prevent content for some websites from loading or a shopping site from processing a payment properly, so it’s not turned on by default, the company said.

Mozilla said it was making progress and expected to block fingerprinting by default in a future release. For now, you can enable the feature by opening the browser preferences, clicking on the privacy and security page, selecting “Custom” and checkmarking “fingerprinters.”

Google announced this year that it planned to introduce fingerprint defense for its Chrome browser, but it did not specify when the feature would be released.

Other desktop browsers can install an add-on.

Disconnect offers a tracker blocker for web browsers that includes fingerprint defense. It’s a downloadable add-on that works with Google’s Chrome browser, among others. I’ve used it on my desktop browsers for years, and it works well. But it also has its flaws: Occasionally, the tool breaks shopping sites, and I have to disable Disconnect to do things like add items to my shopping cart.

Mobile fingerprinting is a different beast.

Fingerprinting can be done directly inside apps, without people easily seeing what data an app is gathering in the background or when it runs. One example of this surfaced in 2017 when The New York Times revealed that Uber used a form of fingerprinting inside its iPhone app to identify users even after they erased content from their devices.

Fingerprint defenses in mobile apps are only beginning to emerge. Here’s one example:

Disconnect offers mobile apps for blocking trackers inside other apps.

For iPhones and Android devices, Privacy Pro and Disconnect Premium can analyze app activities on your device to detect and block trackers, including fingerprinters. Once the Disconnect apps are installed and activated, the tracker blocking happens automatically.

The problem with the Disconnect apps is that it is difficult to decipher which specific apps are doing the fingerprinting so that you can delete them. When I recently opened my Privacy Pro app, it was unable to say which app was doing what because of restrictions in the iPhone’s software architecture. Disconnect said it was working on making the app easier to use.

So what’s the most practical thing you can do for mobile? Start by deleting apps you rarely use, especially the ones from obscure brands. Free apps are most likely to be loaded with trackers, though some paid ones track you, too.

Fingerprinting is a complex topic since the tracking method applies to both the web and mobile apps. But don’t stress if you don’t protect yourself right away: Just learning about it now means you are ahead of the curve.

The New York Times



Millions of Sudanese Mark Eid amid Displacement, Poverty and Hunger

Sacrificial sheep at a livestock market in Khartoum, where demand remains weak (SUNA)
Sacrificial sheep at a livestock market in Khartoum, where demand remains weak (SUNA)
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Millions of Sudanese Mark Eid amid Displacement, Poverty and Hunger

Sacrificial sheep at a livestock market in Khartoum, where demand remains weak (SUNA)
Sacrificial sheep at a livestock market in Khartoum, where demand remains weak (SUNA)

The Sudanese mark Eid al-Adha this year as the war enters its fourth year, amid a harsh humanitarian and economic reality that has changed the face of the holiday and stripped it of many of the social meanings that had remained deeply rooted for decades.

In a country where holidays have long been associated with family gatherings, visits and invitations to share grilled sacrificial meat, millions of Sudanese are receiving Eid this year amid displacement, poverty, hunger and fear. Priorities have shifted from buying a sacrificial animal and children’s clothes to searching for food, medicine and drinking water.

Sudanese, often dressed in bright white clothes during Eid al-Adha, were accustomed to exchanging visits and invitations with neighbors, friends and relatives, and eating grilled meat in homes, neighborhoods and open squares. The practice was one of the most prominent social rituals linked to the occasion, alongside the exchange of meat and family visits.

But the war and economic collapse have greatly weakened those traditions, after large numbers of families became unable to buy sacrificial animals or even meet basic needs.

Refugees and displaced people appear to be suffering most during the holidays, after many lost their homes and sources of income and settled in camps and shelters that lack basic services. Those who remain in other cities and towns face a suffocating economic reality that consumes their limited incomes.

In displacement centers inside Sudan, Eid passes amid crowded tents and high temperatures, with shortages of food, water and healthcare, while diseases such as cholera, malaria and dengue fever spread in areas affected by the war.

“Children no longer ask about clothes or toys, but about food. Many of them do not even feel that there is an Eid,” said Amouna Ismail, a displaced woman from North Darfur who lives in a shelter in the city of Al Dabba.

In refugee camps in neighboring countries, the situation appears more complicated, with large numbers of Sudanese almost entirely dependent on humanitarian aid.

A refugee in one of the camps in Uganda, identified by her initials M.N., said she had not felt the joy of any Eid since fleeing Sudan.

“But what can we do? We are waiting for the war to stop and to return to our country,” she said. “I did not buy sheep for the sacrifice; I raised them at home.”

Umm Ahmed, who was displaced from Kordofan to Gedaref, said: “In the past, Eid was an occasion for joy and connection. Now people feel ashamed because they cannot do anything for their children or their displaced neighbors.”

Even outside areas of displacement and asylum, life remains difficult for many Sudanese who stayed in their cities and villages, amid sharp price increases, falling incomes and interruptions to basic services.

Hashim Moussa, a secondary school teacher, said his salary of 140,000 pounds is no longer enough to buy even one sack of sugar, whose price has exceeded 200,000 Sudanese pounds.

He said teachers had not received salaries or allowances, and that payments for exam monitoring had not been disbursed.

“How can a teacher bring joy to his children or buy clothes and food under these circumstances?” he asked.

Abdullah Mohammed Yusuf, 52, said the war had drained families’ savings and weakened returns from farming and work. His job as a tractor driver no longer provides enough income to cover living costs or buy an Eid sacrificial sheep, he said.

Khaled al-Tihami, a blacksmith, said repeated power cuts had directly affected his work and income. Farming has also become less viable due to water shortages, high fuel and seed costs, and seasonal pests, making it extremely difficult to buy a sacrificial animal this year.

Dr. Salah Jalal, spokesman for the Sudanese Group for Refugee Advocacy, said aid organizations and relief initiatives had worked to provide sacrificial animals in Sudanese refugee camps in eastern Chad, especially in Adre, Maji and Abu Tanqi, as well as refugee camps in South Sudan, Duweli camp and the Ugandan capital Kampala.

He said the initiatives aim to ease the suffering of families who have lost almost everything because of the war, especially during holidays when refugees and displaced people feel a deeper sense of isolation and loss.

He said the Turkish Red Crescent provided 100 bulls for Eid sacrifice to Sudanese refugees in the Kiryandongo camp in Uganda.

In recent years, the Eid sacrifice has no longer been only a religious rite. It has also become a social marker reflecting financial ability and family stability, especially in major cities. But the war and economic collapse have forced many families to abandon those rituals for the first time.

Livestock markets have been directly affected by the war, after large areas in Kordofan and Darfur, known for sheep production, were pushed out of normal activity because of fighting, insecurity and the difficulty of transporting livestock.

Livestock traders said the movement of sheep from Darfur and Kordofan to central and northern states had fallen sharply because of security risks, rising transport costs and restrictions on livestock movement, driving up prices in major cities.

Sheep prices in central and northern states range between 700,000 and 1.5 million Sudanese pounds, or about $150 to $300, sums beyond the reach of most families exhausted by war, inflation and the loss of income sources.

By contrast, prices in Darfur and Kordofan ranged between 250,000 and 300,000 Sudanese pounds because of stagnation, weak purchasing power and the difficulty of moving livestock to the rest of the country.

As the war continues and living conditions deteriorate, millions of Sudanese appear to be receiving another Eid weighed down by loss. The occasion is no longer tied to joy as much as it has become a daily reminder of the scale of the changes the war has imposed on people’s lives and society.

In another sign of the changes the war has imposed on social life, some Sudanese states have moved Eid al-Adha prayers inside mosques instead of the public squares where Sudanese had performed the prayers for decades.

In Sennar state, the state security committee approved a special Eid security plan that included instructions to hold prayers inside mosques, according to the official Sudan News Agency.

Sudanese say the absence of open-air Eid prayers this year reflects the scale of the changes the war has imposed on the details of daily life and public holiday rituals. Eid squares were once open spaces for social gatherings and exchanging greetings on the morning of Eid.


Netanyahu Seeks Alternatives to Control over Palestinian Antiquities

One of the historic Solomon’s Pools in Bethlehem, which Israeli Finance Minister Bezalal Smotrich has vowed to take control of. (Bethlehem Municipality)
One of the historic Solomon’s Pools in Bethlehem, which Israeli Finance Minister Bezalal Smotrich has vowed to take control of. (Bethlehem Municipality)
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Netanyahu Seeks Alternatives to Control over Palestinian Antiquities

One of the historic Solomon’s Pools in Bethlehem, which Israeli Finance Minister Bezalal Smotrich has vowed to take control of. (Bethlehem Municipality)
One of the historic Solomon’s Pools in Bethlehem, which Israeli Finance Minister Bezalal Smotrich has vowed to take control of. (Bethlehem Municipality)

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has ordered a comprehensive review of a controversial Antiquities Authority bill for the West Bank and Gaza Strip, and instructed Cabinet Secretary Yossi Fuchs to look for “alternatives” to the draft law, which is now being debated by the Knesset Education Committee, after security and professional bodies warned of “serious international damage.”

Hebrew media outlets quoted Israeli sources on Tuesday as saying Netanyahu was effectively obstructing the bill because it threatens Israel’s foreign relations, making the chances of passing any version of it before the current Knesset is dissolved “slim.”

Netanyahu’s position followed warnings from legal and security officials against the law, which establishes a “civil heritage authority” in the West Bank and Gaza Strip.

The Knesset plenum approved the bill in its first reading this month. The legislation would give the Antiquities Authority, once established, absolute authority over archaeological sites in the occupied West Bank. The scope was later expanded to include the Gaza Strip.

Palestinian antiquities under an Israeli minister

The bill, submitted by Likud lawmaker Amit Halevi, whose party is led by Netanyahu, calls for establishing an “Antiquities Authority” under the responsibility of Israel’s “heritage minister.”

It would be “fully responsible for handling all heritage and antiquities affairs in the area,” with powers including land confiscation, archaeological excavations and their management, and law enforcement. The powers of the “archaeology officer” in the army’s Civil Administration would be transferred to it.

The Knesset Education and Culture Committee is discussing the bill to draft its final version and submit it for a second and third reading. During that process, disputes emerged and Netanyahu intervened.

A representative of Israel’s National Security Council confirmed on Tuesday that Netanyahu “authorized the Cabinet secretary to examine the matter and submit the findings to him.”

A representative of Israel’s Foreign Ministry who attended the Knesset Education Committee on Tuesday also confirmed this, telling members that “the prime minister authorized the Cabinet secretary, and alternative options to the law are currently being examined.”

Asked about the Foreign Ministry’s position, he said: “It is too early to express a position.”

Netanyahu’s stance confused the proposal’s supporters and those who had pushed for it.

Education Committee Chairman Zvi Sukkot said that the law was getting promoted in the committee.

‘A violation of law’

Tami Sela, the legal adviser to the Knesset Education Committee, submitted a legal opinion stating that the bill violates international law, raises legal difficulties, and could be interpreted as creeping annexation.

“This is an unusual proposal and an unprecedented one, as an Israeli civil authority that is not part of the Israeli military would be granted powers in Palestinian territories and over their residents,” she said.

“In addition, the proposed law contradicts the Oslo Accords and constitutes a violation of the rules of international law.”

Sela noted that military authority in the West Bank is considered temporary, and that “passing this law could strengthen claims of a gradual annexation process.”

In addition to Sela, security officials opposed the law. The Israeli army said it “would harm the standing of military and security officials, and would be viewed internationally as a step involving de facto annexation.”

The Israel Academy of Sciences and Humanities also appealed to Netanyahu to prevent the law from passing.

According to the Academy, the passage of the law will be viewed in political and academic circles as the annexation of Judea and Samaria.

This will undoubtedly lead to an immediate deterioration in Israel’s international relations in the field of archaeology and will also affect other areas of science and research.

The council of the Israel Antiquities Authority submitted a similar position paper, warning that “the bill could cause significant damage to academic relations with international bodies.”

It said the legislation “will be interpreted as a violation of international law, and will severely harm Israeli archaeologists’ membership in international organizations and research cooperation, including important excavation projects in the country.”

Israeli media outlets, including The Times of Israel, said the antiquities bill will most likely not be brought to a final vote in the plenum before the Knesset is dissolved.

The Times of Israel said the Knesset plenum convened on Tuesday with no bills on its agenda.

The coalition currently cannot rely on the support of the ultra-Orthodox parties in the Knesset, which led the campaign to dissolve the Knesset, to back its legislation.

This is the first time the Knesset has attempted to give a civil authority powers over Palestinian Authority territory and its residents.

It comes as the Israeli government has pushed a series of laws that would weaken and dismantle the Palestinian Authority and expand Israeli powers in the West Bank.

Smotrich enters Solomon’s Pools

Ignoring Netanyahu and the criticism, Israeli Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich entered the archaeological area of Solomon’s Pools in Bethlehem on Monday and vowed to take control of it.

Speaking from the site, Smotrich said: “Transferring these pools and this heritage achievement to the terrorist Palestinians was a mistake. It should not have been transferred to Area A for them to desecrate. We will restore the area. I have taken it upon myself to rebuild these pools and open them to visitors. This is a historic matter and a matter of Zionist heritage. We will succeed, God willing, and we will achieve this important goal.”

Solomon’s Pools are among the most important historical, archaeological, and water landmarks in Palestine. They are located southwest of Bethlehem and consist of three very large heritage pools.

The Palestinian Ministry of Awqaf and Religious Affairs condemned Smotrich’s move, stressing that the area is “purely Islamic endowment property.”

“This incursion represents a blatant attack on endowment properties, and a desperate attempt to impose a new colonial reality and falsify the historical and Islamic identity of the area,” it said.

The ministry called on the international community, rights institutions, and UNESCO to intervene immediately to stop what it called this arrogance.


Trump Declares Himself in Perfect Health After Physical Exam

President Donald Trump salutes during the playing of taps at the 158th National Memorial Day Observance coinciding with the nation's 250th anniversary, at the Memorial Amphitheater in Arlington National Cemetery, Monday, May 25, 2026, in Arlington, Va. (AP)
President Donald Trump salutes during the playing of taps at the 158th National Memorial Day Observance coinciding with the nation's 250th anniversary, at the Memorial Amphitheater in Arlington National Cemetery, Monday, May 25, 2026, in Arlington, Va. (AP)
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Trump Declares Himself in Perfect Health After Physical Exam

President Donald Trump salutes during the playing of taps at the 158th National Memorial Day Observance coinciding with the nation's 250th anniversary, at the Memorial Amphitheater in Arlington National Cemetery, Monday, May 25, 2026, in Arlington, Va. (AP)
President Donald Trump salutes during the playing of taps at the 158th National Memorial Day Observance coinciding with the nation's 250th anniversary, at the Memorial Amphitheater in Arlington National Cemetery, Monday, May 25, 2026, in Arlington, Va. (AP)

US President Donald Trump, who turns 80 next month, said "everything checked out perfectly" after having his physical on Tuesday at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center, following a year of public attention on apparently minor health issues.

Trump offered no details of the physical in a brief Truth Social post saying he had completed his six-monthly exam. Trump frequently casts himself as more energetic and fitter than Joe Biden, his Democratic predecessor who left office last year at age 82 after facing questions about his fitness for the job.

Still, recent photographs showing a blotchy neck rash have added to questions about Trump's health, following images in July 2025 of swollen ankles ‌and a bruised ‌hand concealed with makeup.

Trump, whose birthday is June 14, became the ‌oldest ⁠person to assume the ⁠presidency when he began his second term in January 2025.

The visit to Walter Reed National Military Medical Center was Trump's third in 13 months.

Trump maintains an active golf schedule, but joked about his relative lack of exercise at a recent Oval Office event where his health secretary, Robert F. Kennedy Jr, said the president walks nine miles (14.5 km) every time he goes golfing.

"When I am not using the cart," Trump said.

White House physician Sean Barbabella has said Trump is using a ⁠common cream as "a preventative skin treatment" to address the neck rash, but ‌he has not given details of the condition being ‌treated.

After the photographs of the president's legs and hands were published last July, Barbabella said in a ‌letter that the ailments were benign and that there was no evidence of deep vein thrombosis ‌or arterial disease.

Trump's leg swelling was from a "common" vein condition, and his hand was bruised from shaking so many hands, White House spokesperson Karoline Leavitt told reporters.

Trump said last October that he had received a magnetic resonance imaging exam that month.

The White House initially declined to share further details on the ‌reason for the scan. Leavitt said only that it indicated "exceptional physical health" for Trump.

The president later told reporters he got the MRI as ⁠part of a second physical ⁠exam.

"Getting an MRI is very standard. What, you think I shouldn't have it? Other people get it. ... I had an MRI. The doctor said it was the best result he has ever seen as a doctor," Trump said.

Medical experts noted that MRIs are not typically part of a routine physical and are usually prescribed to get detailed images of the body.

In a memo after the second exam, Barbabella said the president's cardiac age - a validated measure of cardiovascular vitality via ECG - was found to be approximately 14 years younger than his chronological age.

Trump has also faced questions after appearing to fall asleep during several meetings, including a session with his Cabinet.

"Some people said, he closed his eyes. Look, it got pretty boring," Trump told laughing officials in February. "I didn't sleep. I just closed them because I wanted to get the hell outta here."

Biden last year was diagnosed with an "aggressive form" of prostate cancer that spread to his bones, and underwent radiation therapy.