I've had difficuties finding all the informations I'm looking for on how to reduce one's fingerprints on the Internet, during "everyday" network surfing.
I'm found this post which is interesting : Whats the best way to make my internet traffic anonymous? with the anwser made by Shnatsel [1] But it doesn't quite answer my need and is too broad for me
My question is about how much fingerprints are put on the internet when I'm surfing. Say I'm a standard user using Google Mail, Google Maps, IMDB, Facebook, Flickr, etc. on a regular basis. I want to know how can I be more discreet than what I would call an "average user"
My questions are then as follows :
This site : http://donttrack.us/ and the post [1] referenced hereabove say that Google saves our search queries such as "cancer", or "herpes", etc.
- Obscuring traffic is a part of the problem as [1] said. I'm thinking that having a good cover can help (such as false ID), is this assumption correct ?
- What if I create a false Google Account for Google Maps, Mail, etc. ? Does it keeps my prints from being linked to me by Google ? If not, how can I prevent it ?
- Does using a site like Flickr can be tracked ?
- By Flickr itself ?
- By Google ?
- Will it interest a governmental instance if I'm a random user ?
- How can I avoid it ?
- If I'm a random insignificant person on the internet making a query about sensitive material (weapon, drugs, etc.). Will the NSA or any instance keep track of my browsing and be able to store that I searched for said sensitive material ?
- What if I use DuckDuckGo for instance ? Does it anonymize me in any way ? How can I be completely sure that DuckDuckGo is not reselling any information whatsoever and lying to its user saying it's tracking-free ?
Is it helpful for anonymization to do "normal" queries with a standard Firefox and sensitive searches or mailing, or blogging with a Tor Firefox Bundle ? I'm thinking that using Tor seems to attract interest from governmental instances. Maybe it attracts more interest than it anonymizes, is this true ?
If I'm using a false ID for Google, using DuckDuckGo and Tor for sensitive research or blogging, or mailing, is it a good start or is it completely useless ?