We had an off-topic excursion over on
this thread concerning web-site valuations, advertising, the tracking of our activity on the web, and related matters.
This is an off-topic followup - some of the points made over there were rather mistaken, but it's a fact of modern life that our activities are tracked and correlated. If you care about that and intend to avoid being tracked, you'll need to take relatively drastic action. Merely switching your search-engine provider won't be enough - as is evidenced by
Quote:
But yes, the surveillance is ridiculous. I get the ads on fb for things I was just looking at or just bought. I always click the thing to tell them I don't want to see this ad.
Tracking web behaviour is big business - see
this article.
Personally I
block almost all advertising using a hosts file which serves all the machines in my home network. If you use an adblocking addon to your browser, be aware that it might merely suppress the display of adverts - if they are still fetched, as they usually are, then you will still be tracked across almost all sites which have adverts or tracking.
I don't bother to avoid cookies, but you'd need to do that too, as well as
blocking flash. Every page with a "like" button is calling home to Facebook to correlate your activity, and that applies also to those without a Facebook account. Similarly every page carrying Google's +1 button or Google's textual adverts.
If you don't take
dramatic and purposeful action then your IP address is inevitably known to every website you visit and every provider of embedded content on that website. It is not the only identifier that's used to correlate activity, but it is one of many. Bear in mind that commerce doesn't care who you are, as such, but they care about what you're likely to buy. They want to categorise you, and the finer the categorisation the better.
There are those who say that they would prefer to see relevant ads, compared to irrelevant ones, and they might have a point. Personally I prefer no ads, although I understand that's a challenge to the funding model of some websites. We've seen that a funding drive from readers can be a practical alternative.
Finally, all the search engines at least will crawl the web - as much of it and as often as they can. That's why you see bingbot and googlebot as sometime visitors on a forum like this - they are updating their indexes by reading the forums. Nothing particularly sinister about that. Making the forum private to subscribers or unindexed by search engines would surely be a net loss.