How Unique is Whose Web Browser? The role of demographics in browser fingerprinting among US users
Alex Berke, Enrico Bacis, Badih Ghazi, Pritish Kamath, Ravi Kumar,, Robin Lassonde, Pasin Manurangsi, Umar Syed

TL;DR
This study introduces a unique dataset linking browser attributes with user demographics, revealing how demographic factors influence fingerprinting risks and user willingness to share data, thereby advancing privacy research.
Contribution
It provides the first publicly available dataset combining browser attributes with demographics and survey responses, enabling detailed analysis of fingerprinting risks across demographic groups.
Findings
Lower income users face higher fingerprinting risks.
Older users are more concerned about fingerprinting and at greater risk.
Demographics can be inferred from browser attributes, revealing privacy vulnerabilities.
Abstract
Browser fingerprinting can be used to identify and track users across the Web, even without cookies, by collecting attributes from users' devices to create unique "fingerprints". This technique and resulting privacy risks have been studied for over a decade. Yet further research is limited because prior studies used data not publicly available. Additionally, data in prior studies lacked user demographics. Here we provide a first-of-its-kind dataset to enable further research. It includes browser attributes with users' demographics and survey responses, collected with informed consent from 8,400 US study participants. We use this dataset to demonstrate how fingerprinting risks differ across demographic groups. For example, we find lower income users are more at risk, and find that as users' age increases, they are both more likely to be concerned about fingerprinting and at real risk of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDigital Communication and Language · Social Media and Politics · Authorship Attribution and Profiling
