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Secretly tell you who knows what you're looking at when you browse "small sites."

When it comes to privacy, everyone is afraid that it will be leaked, in case the "fig leaf" is ripped off, where should this old face be put?

But in the Internet age, you work hard to protect your privacy, but you never find that this privacy is leaked all the time. Quite simply, when you search for something in your browser and watch certain videos in an app, your information, preferences, and so on are stealthily stealth.

Secretly tell you who knows what you're looking at when you browse "small sites."

Back to our main topic today, when sneaking through certain websites, who knows what you read?

Open the browser, enter a search keyword, and you will find that it takes extra care of you, memorizes your "past" and helps you record the relevant records of your previous searches. Ah ~ I don't know whether to thank the browser for "taking care" or hate it for helping you record without consent.

Secretly tell you who knows what you're looking at when you browse "small sites."

So, where are these search records kept?

There are two situations, one is to log in to the account in the browser, and the other is not to log in the account. The former is most likely saved to the cloud, which is the browser's database server; the latter saves the information in the form of a cookie locally on the device, at which point we clean the cache regularly.

Secretly tell you who knows what you're looking at when you browse "small sites."

After entering the website, who knows what our information is? If you are connected to the WiFi Internet at home, then first the website can get your IP address, through the IP positioning can find your place of residence, of course, this is also what the website developers see.

When browsing data on a website, there will be network operators and network firewalls, they will review the pages we want to browse, if you are peeking at small videos, you may be prompted and forbidden to continue to access the page.

Secretly tell you who knows what you're looking at when you browse "small sites."

And did you find out? The input method is like a confidant with a red face, you say a word, it will know what you want to say later, think about it!

The next thing to say is the cookie information saved by the browser, which is generally only accessible to the website. However, the website can also use third-party cookies to verify user identity, such as the common login through third-party software such as QQ, Weibo, WeChat, Alipay, etc., and the third-party cookies will be loaded when used, at which time your data will be tracked by the third party.

Secretly tell you who knows what you're looking at when you browse "small sites."

That's why when you search for something in your browser, opening a shopping site will give you the exact recommendation you want

So, do you still dare to sneak through small websites?

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