The Hitchhiker's Guide to Facebook Web Tracking with Invisible Pixels and Click IDs
Paschalis Bekos, Panagiotis Papadopoulos, Evangelos P. Markatos,, Nicolas Kourtellis

TL;DR
This paper reveals how Facebook's new URL tagging and pixel tracking enable persistent, cross-website user monitoring, even retroactively linking past anonymous browsing to user profiles and tracking future activity.
Contribution
It demonstrates that Facebook's FBCLID tags combined with FB Pixel can de-anonymize users and track their web activity over years, revealing privacy risks of this tracking method.
Findings
23% of top websites use FB tracking technology.
FB Pixel tracks detailed user activities, especially on sensitive sites.
Past browsing data can be linked to new Facebook profiles, dating back to 2015.
Abstract
Over the past years, advertisement companies have used various tracking methods to persistently track users across the web. Such tracking methods usually include first and third-party cookies, cookie synchronization, as well as a variety of fingerprinting mechanisms. Facebook (FB) recently introduced a new tagging mechanism that attaches a one-time tag as a URL parameter (FBCLID) on outgoing links to other websites. Although such a tag does not seem to have enough information to persistently track users, we demonstrate that despite its ephemeral nature, when combined with FB Pixel, it can aid in persistently monitoring user browsing behavior across i) different websites, ii) different actions on each website, iii) time, i.e., both in the past as well as in the future. We refer to this online monitoring of users as FB web tracking. We find that FB Pixel tracks a wide range of user…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDigital Marketing and Social Media
