Mozilla has a petition asking Facebook to stop tracking people's browsing off the site unless they opt in to it. Frankly I think the solution is to remove the ability to track people across sites from the web entirely, but I signed the petition anyway. Facebook has taken a huge hit to their reputation, so now is a good time to be putting pressure on them to change their ways.
@seanl Technically, how could this capability be removed?
@seanl So, basically kluges -- not really a rigorous limitation?
@woozle It would help a LOT if the #1 browser weren't developed by a company whose entire business is violating people's privacy. Chrome needs to be liberated from Google or destroyed.
@woozle In terms of the technical capabilities that exist right now, yes, it's basically kludges. Unless you're going to start turning off first-party cookies by default. Browsers could gradually force publishers toward a web where using cookies or other client-side state for things that break functionality for non-logged-in people drives enough people away that they decide it's not worth it. That doesn't stop IP tracking, but NAT and IPv6 privacy extensions make that at best a heuristic.