2021-06-17 20:22:12 +00:00
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title = "email tracking links"
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date = 2021-06-17
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2021-07-06 21:32:34 +00:00
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tags = ["email", "rant", "computers", "things-that-are-bad", "privacy"]
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2021-06-17 20:22:12 +00:00
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You probably get emails every day, and spend a lot of time reading them. And
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whenever someone performs an action or does something in vast quantities, you
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_bet_ the data people have figured out a way to capitalize on it. For many
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years consumer privacy has basically gone unnoticed, and invasive tracking has
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grown [viral][1].
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Arguably, if you are someone who runs a business off of writing periodic
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newsletters that are distributed via email, you might want some statistics on
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how your newsletter is doing. Traditionally, this is achieved **actively**
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through some kind of survey with some kind of incentive, like "tell us how
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we're doing for a chance to win a water bottle".
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Now emails are typically imbued with **passive** trackers either in the form of
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[tracking pixels][3] (which informs the sender when the receipient opens the
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email) and [tracking links][4] (which informs the sender when AND what links
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receipients click). Tracking pixels are usually less relevant these days since
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many web-based email clients will ask before loading images, and clients run by
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mail servers with an enormous number of users like Gmail ([and soon iOS][5])
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may proxy the pixels ahead of time so the senders only see the IPs and metadata
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of the server.
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Tracking links, on the other hand, have become much more invasive, to the point
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where it's impossible to avoid being tracked. You see it all over the web:
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whenever you open a link, there's almost always some kind of `?ref=xxxxx` code
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stuck onto the end that identifies _your_ particular instance of it. This way,
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if you share the link with a friend, they just used the same code, and your
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connection to your friend is traced by the website owner.
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> If this creeps you out, consider using a browser extension like
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> [ClearURLs][6], which recognizes these URL parameters that do nothing but
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> feed information to the website owners and removes it for you.
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But email tracking links are even worse: they abuse redirects to obfuscate the
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original URL entirely. For instance, you'd get links in your email that look
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like:
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```
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https://some.mail.host/lWOrjb9FXYgMDS0DADOsxAZEFPB99gHzmRQTe6OHBws=
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```
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Where does it go? Wikipedia? Piratebay? There's only one way to find out: by
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making a request to that server, giving up information about the time, place,
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client, OS, and all sorts of other information that greedy data collection
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companies are waiting to snatch up.
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Of course, regular users notice nothing: these links are usually hidden behind
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buttons, text, or even the original URL itself. Once they click it, the website
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silently logs all the data it receives about the user, and then redirects the
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user to the original destination.
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The senders usually aren't at fault either. Sending email is tricky, with all
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the infrastructure set up to block out spam, so the majority of people who send
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bulk mail (newsletters, websites that need to confirm your email, etc.) all go
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through companies that handle this for them. Of course, being the middlemen who
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actually get the mail out the door, they're free to replace the links with
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whatever they want, and many of these companies advertise it as a feature to
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get more "insight" into how your emails are doing.
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Even worse, the original senders aren't the only ones getting the info, either.
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These middlemen could hold on to the data and there's no saying they can't use
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it for other purposes or sell it.
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Unfortunately, sending email isn't really going to get any easier, partly
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because of the way email fundamentally works: without all of the security
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infrastructure in place, running your own email server could easily lead to
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abuse. Most people (justifiably) would not go through all that effort
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themselves.
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2021-06-18 03:37:41 +00:00
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Another possible avenue of thinking is to do what large mail companies did to
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oppose tracking pixels, where they would act as a mass-proxy for the links,
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opening them when they receive it, and transparently replace the unfiltered
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link back into the email so the user's device and location aren't revealed. But
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this raises its own issues: for example, what if the act of opening the
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original link performs some kind of action (e.g. click to subscribe, click to
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register, etc.)? Also, this solution only works for email that is not
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end-to-end encrypted. For end-to-end encrypted mail providers, there is no way
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to do this.
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The only real solution here is regulation via either advancement in
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privacy-related open standards or legislature. It's clear that without any kind
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of regulation, companies will continue to act in the interests of profit rather
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than the protection of their customers.
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> Devil's advocate afterthought: should this problem even be solved? Maybe
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> there's a benefit to this whole tracking thing. My opinion on this is if you
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> _really_ want to develop a community of readers, offer an easy way to give
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> feedback (or even go back to the incentive surveys), and if people aren't
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> giving feedback, then that itself is a reflection of the state of your
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> readers.
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[1]: https://www.wired.com/story/how-email-open-tracking-quietly-took-over-the-web/
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[3]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Web_beacon
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[4]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Click_tracking
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[5]: https://www.apple.com/newsroom/2021/06/apple-advances-its-privacy-leadership-with-ios-15-ipados-15-macos-monterey-and-watchos-8
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[6]: https://gitlab.com/KevinRoebert/ClearUrls
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