Yes, as long as you use “Private Mode” along with it. In fact the above TidBITS article shows a Washington Post page as an example of it’s being able to do that.
Yes, it will strip that stuff out.
Hm, could you explain like I’m 7 instead of 70? Can’t get it to work,perhaps because I’m a wapo subscriber so I never see that adblocker whining popup, but I still get the tracking info added when I copy a URL, even using a Firefox Private Mode window to open wapo.com.
We considered it, but I honestly don’t see any reason to use Edge. Adam uses Brave, I use Firefox (funny enough, I originally got him into Brave), and of course we fall back on Safari as needed. I don’t see a reason to use any other browser on the Mac at the moment.
I’ve been meaning to write about Brave, which I like. I used Edge briefly during the beta but didn’t find it compelling enough to switch. I still have it and use it occasionally when I need Yet Another Browser.
I mostly use Safari, or Chrome for work (because they don’t have Safari) but occasionally some websites don’t work in Safari so I have to use Chrome. That most often happens with links to journal articles via my university library having too many hops, which Chrome handles OK but Safari doesn’t. Ideally I would have one browser that allows me to continue sessions between devices, regardless of whether it’s a home or locked-down work device/PC. I haven’t found that yet In any case, it’s a hassle to switch so inertia will probably keep me on Safari.
Oh, and of course, works with plug-ins such as StopTheMadness
Nope, I can’t seem to find any setting to block the addition of the tracking code when I copy a WaPo URL. Again, maybe because I’m a subscriber so I never see the whining “subscribe” popup?
Another example:
Is that a tracking code or just a clunky URL? For example, if I click a random article on Cult of Mac’s Twitter feed without StopTheMadness, I get:
https://www.cultofmac.com/686545/apple-maps-look-around-boston-philadelphia-washington/?utm_campaign=twitter&utm_medium=twitter&utm_source=twitter
But then if I click the same link with StopTheMadness on, I get:
https://www.cultofmac.com/686545/apple-maps-look-around-boston-philadelphia-washington/
You might want to shoot Jeff Johnson an email and see what he says about those WaPo URLs.
(Not picking on Cult of Mac, it’s just the easiest place I know off the top of my head to find those kind of tracking links.)
is the kind of added stuff I’m asking about, for sure. It seems to be a way of tracking any time someone copies a block of text off a page and pastes it elsewhere, kind of an automatic citation. Which annoys me because it’s tracking where I do read stuff routinely.
Here’s another: I copied and pasted just the article headline into a text file then clicked the resulting link and it opened the source page.
I did not find a contact link for Jeff Johnson, so I guess I’m hoping he
follows this discussion. Pointer welcome.
It’s not tracking you, it’s simply tracking where the link was found so that the site will know what the effectiveness of various methods of pointing to their site. That way way know where to put their time and advertising efforts to best use.
Jeff can be reached at stopthemadness@underpassapp.com.
It’s tracking what I read – where I copied something from. Ask a librarian about that.
[### Toward the Post-Privacy Library? | American Libraries Magazine
americanlibrariesmagazine.org › 2015/06/16 › toward-the-post-privac…]
(https://americanlibrariesmagazine.org/2015/06/16/toward-the-post-privacy-library/)
Jun 16, 2015 - Statistics and optimization services like Google Analytics and New Relic don’t currently share Alice’s search history with advertising networks, but libraries should evaluate the privacy assurances from these services to see if they are consistent with their own policies and local privacy laws.
Recent tweet from DuckDuckGo: https://twitter.com/duckduckgo/status/1230866518675726342?s=21
It’s sadly ironic how many privacy-related articles are shared with tracking parameters added to the address.
So here’s a PSA to protect your friends & followers: When you share any links, please check for (& remove) text in the address that starts with ?utm_
HI,
Looks like a nice little useful app, thanks.
I hate is when password pasting and also video controls are blocked.
BUT
I see that StopThe Madness wants to read ‘passwords, phone numbers & credit cards’, should we be concerned about that?
I normally disallow expansions that require such access.
thanks to you all
Wow - thanks for this post. I would like to know the answer to that question too.
Recent tweet from DuckDuckGo: https://twitter.com/duckduckgo/status/1230866518675726342?s=21
It’s sadly ironic how many privacy-related articles are shared with tracking parameters added to the address.
So here’s a PSA to protect your friends & followers
===========================================
Very helpful, thank you, that’s exactly what I wanted. And they’re free too!
I’ve been using Brave for awhile and I like it enough that I only use Safari to view videos at Netflix and Amazon. (Brave lacks an extension that allows the playing of DRM-protected videos.)
I have noticed that more websites do not play nicely with 1Password 7 when using Brave than Safari. Will Stop The Madness generally improve the 1Password user experience in Brave?
Thanks for the heads up on this article. I don’t use Facebook, but I sometimes need to archive text that’s in posts there. It’s been extremely irritating that I can’t copy and past the content from that site. This did the trick.