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Google Privacy

Is It Time To Ditch Google Analytics? (fastcompany.com) 96

"In the last year, a swell of privacy-focused website analytics platforms have started to provide an alternative to Google's tracking behemoth," reports Fast Company.

An anonymous reader shares their article about startups providing "privacy-centric analytics, claiming not to collect any personal data and only display simple metrics like page views, referral websites, and screen sizes in clean, pared-down interfaces."

While Simple Analytics and Fathom are both recent additions to the world of privacy-focused data analytics, 1.5% of the internet already uses an open-source, decentralized platform called Matomo, according to the company... "When [Google] released Google Analytics, [it] was obvious to me that a certain percent of the world would want the same technology, but decentralized, where it's not provided by a centralized corporation and you're not dependent on them," says Matthieu Aubry, Matomo's founder. "If you use it on your own server, it's impossible for us to get any data from it."

Aubry says that 99% of Matomo users use the analytics code, which is open for anyone to use, and host their analytics on their own servers -- which means that the company has no access to it whatsoever. For Aubry, that's his way of ensuring privacy by design. United Nations, Amnesty International, NASA, and the European Commission and about 1.5 million other websites use Matomo. But Matomo also offers significantly more robust tracking than Fathom or Simple Analytics -- Aubry says it can do about 95% of what Google Analytics does. Still, there are a few key differences. Like Simple Analytics, Matomo honors Do Not Track....

The rise of these analytics startups speaks to a growing desire for alternatives to the corporate ecosystems controlled by giants like Google, Amazon, and Apple, a swell that has helped privacy-focused search engine Duck Duck Go reach 36 million searches in a day. There's even an entire website dedicated to alternates to all of Google's services. For Aubry of Matomo, this concentration of power in the hands (or servers) of billion-dollar companies is the reason to support smaller, decentralized networks like his own that share code. "We want to control our future technology -- be able to understand it, study it, see what it does beneath the hood," he says. "And when it doesn't work we can fix it ourselves."

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Is It Time To Ditch Google Analytics?

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  • Block It (Score:5, Insightful)

    by mentil ( 1748130 ) on Sunday February 03, 2019 @08:45AM (#58063508)

    I have google-analytics.com set to Untrusted in NoScript. Privacy Badger blocks the whole domain by default. I suspect Firefox's tracking protection also blocks it.
    This post gets extra irony points given Slashdot uses Google Analytics.

    • I have google-analytics.com set to Untrusted in NoScript. Privacy Badger blocks the whole domain by default. I suspect Firefox's tracking protection also blocks it. This post gets extra irony points given Slashdot uses Google Analytics.

      Did you ever go through and see just what all bullshit is being stopped by those two? Yikes!

      I'm in a discussion with a person on a different board who was wanting to stop FB tracking. I told him to install a scriptblocker.

      Next thing, another guy barges in saying I was talking bullshit - all you need to do is empty your cookies. Said he was a web developer, and got hysterical when I disagreed.

      I guess he must have some reason for people to run all the scripts.

      • NoScript and DNS blocking both together sounds ideal, but if I had to pick just one, I'd keep NoScript.

        Most of the networks I'm on, someone else will have already cached the DNS lookups in the router anyway - the lookups aren't going to Google every time. The potential for detailed tracking there is a lot less than with a script having free reign to do whatever it wants.
        • NoScript and DNS blocking both together sounds ideal, but if I had to pick just one, I'd keep NoScript. Most of the networks I'm on, someone else will have already cached the DNS lookups in the router anyway - the lookups aren't going to Google every time. The potential for detailed tracking there is a lot less than with a script having free reign to do whatever it wants.

          Exactly. Scripts are the child from hell. It's not only that they are tracking you, they can execute, and does anyone know one of the most compelling reasons behind ever increasing data caps for smartphones? you got it. My favorite personal anecdote from earlier times was when I downloaded a 40 Kbyte or so pdf file, and ended up downloading 40 megabytes worth of.....scripts mostly. There were many times I blew through my cap in a couple days back in the day.

          Today if I have to use my smartphone for the in

          • I noticed similar on my phone, somehow Chrome was eating up even more data than YouTube. The WWW has truly gotten to a sad state when loading a few pages of text and images uses more bandwidth than streaming video for the same amount of time... It's barely any better than ActiveX plugins and Flash. Somewhat less likely to get you installed with a rootkit, though.
            • I noticed similar on my phone, somehow Chrome was eating up even more data than YouTube. The WWW has truly gotten to a sad state when loading a few pages of text and images uses more bandwidth than streaming video for the same amount of time... It's barely any better than ActiveX plugins and Flash. Somewhat less likely to get you installed with a rootkit, though.

              The internet is sick - very sick.

    • by Misagon ( 1135 )

      Have you checked?
      I use Privacy Badger (2019.1.30), and www.google-analytics.com, as well as www.googletagmanager.com and www.googletagservices.com have got categorised under "The domains below don't appear to be tracking you".

      • by mentil ( 1748130 )

        You're right, seems I'd manually blocked it. Can't revert for some reason (bug?), so can't check what the default setting is.

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      So we should probably support Google Analytics because it's easy to block, unlikely self-hosted solutions which don't offer an easy to kill domain name.

      • Why would you care about self-hosted analytics? I don't mind if individual sites perform site-specific analytics. I just don't want any single company being able to track me across the entire web without my consent.

    • Yes, but slashdot readers know that if they host their own (free) analytics software, then they'll get unblocked results.

      The only reasonable use case for Google Analytics is for sites that also run Google ads. In that case, it is basically a feature to leave out the adblocking visitors. :)

  • by Anonymous Coward

    for a company that offers crippled open source version, and then expects you to pay a monthly subscription to get feature parity with Google.

  • I blocked Google Analytics on the router level years ago (so that it works on phones and tablets at home too) and I thought everybody did it.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday February 03, 2019 @12:35PM (#58064170)

    Anyone? Give me a solid reason to do so.

    • we've been running piwik/matomo for over ten years. We use it to track low usage periods for upgrades and to track specific links in our sites. Our traffic is very cyclical so identifying low periods of activity allows us to better plan maintenance while impacting the fewest number of users...
    • Well, let's see...
      - Because you want to know what pages of your site are being used, and which ones aren't.
      - Because you want to know what browsers you need to support, based on what your users are using.
      - Because you want to do A/B testing of a new feature.
      - Because you want to know minute-by-minute the load on your Web server.

      If you are running a personal site, then yeah, who cares. But if you have lots of users, who complain when things don't work, you need analytics. And...Google Analytics is easy to im

  • Do you want to play super-nice with Google? Or do you need GAs features? Then a corporate account and tie everything concerning your website including analytics to it.

    Other than that, use Piwik or whatever it's successor is called these days.

  • It's way past time (Score:5, Insightful)

    by WaffleMonster ( 969671 ) on Sunday February 03, 2019 @04:13PM (#58064968)

    GA is effectively dead. Millions of users are already blocking this and every other external service similar to it in existence. The result is data provided by these services is at very least incomplete.

    If you want accurate figures install a stats package and parse your own web logs. It's not rocket science.

  • Google analytics is a matured product which has been used by millions. I don't think any other product can replace it, because it is more trusted and and time tested. As a strong organization like Google is behind it.
  • I'm blocking that

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