Website fined by German court for leaking visitor's IP address via Google Fonts |
Website fined by German court for leaking visitor's IP address via Google Fonts |
Christian J |
Feb 9 2022, 09:48 PM
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#1
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. Group: WDG Moderators Posts: 9,665 Joined: 10-August 06 Member No.: 7 |
https://www.theregister.com/2022/01/31/webs...gle_fonts_gdpr/
In a way this is excellent news. But surely all sites with third-party script should be fined equally? |
pandy |
Feb 9 2022, 10:50 PM
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#2
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🌟Computer says no🌟 Group: WDG Moderators Posts: 20,734 Joined: 9-August 06 Member No.: 6 |
Does that mean Google gets our IP addresses every time a google font is downloaded or was there something special with this site?
Oh well. €100 isn't much. For a company it's nothing. |
Brian Chandler |
Feb 10 2022, 01:30 AM
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#3
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Jocular coder Group: Members Posts: 2,460 Joined: 31-August 06 Member No.: 43 |
"Excellent news"??? Really? It strikes me as completely insane. No future "EU-compliant" website can include third-party images, then? "Legal mind" might like to know that my opinion of it is already such that it is imossible to lower it.
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pandy |
Feb 10 2022, 07:04 AM
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#4
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🌟Computer says no🌟 Group: WDG Moderators Posts: 20,734 Joined: 9-August 06 Member No.: 6 |
Ah, of course! The font is downloaded from google so it's in their access logs. Didn't think.
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Brian Chandler |
Feb 10 2022, 09:45 AM
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#5
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Jocular coder Group: Members Posts: 2,460 Joined: 31-August 06 Member No.: 43 |
Ah, of course! The font is downloaded from google so it's in their access logs. Didn't think. Yes, but as a matter of (computer-science-informed) fact, rather than judicial confusion, they are wrong. You have merely sent them a document including google's address, and they have chosen to operate software that accesses that address. OTOH, the first thing my website does if they choose to access it, is to send their IP address to ip.info, to find out whether they are in the EU or not. If they really had their way (worldwide), I would first have to show a popup with three choices: (1) EU and insane (i.e. do not want my ip address sent to anyone) in which case I block them for ever (2) EU and reasonable (so I can ask ip.info where they are), and (3) Non-EU (in which case we can proceed sanely anyway. I find it depressing that the German-speaking countries, which one generally thinks of as rational, have some of the most stupid judges. |
Christian J |
Feb 10 2022, 05:40 PM
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#6
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. Group: WDG Moderators Posts: 9,665 Joined: 10-August 06 Member No.: 7 |
You have merely sent them a document including google's address, and they have chosen to operate software that accesses that address. Doesn't that make the document a Trojan? I have of course patched the vulnerability by using third-party blockers in some of my browsers... |
Lo-Fi Version | Time is now: 11th May 2024 - 05:24 AM |