60 comments

  • denysvitali 1 day ago
    Cloudflare is known to use fingerprinting to detect scrapers For example, they use JA3 fingerprints and match them against the UA to block stuff like cURL while allowing OkHttp (Android clients) - but this can be easily be spoofed with packages such as CycleTLS [1].

    I don't want to defend them, because they gate away a good chunk of the internet with their "bot protection", but unless you do PoW (which is also ecologically a nightmare), probably fingerprinting is the way to go - completely destroying the privacy of everyone involved.

    Cromite, a privacy conscious fork of Chromium for Android, has constantly issues with CloudFlare Turnstile [2] because they (Cloudflare) try to fingerprint it in multiple ways in order to pass the challenge. The only way to get it to work would be to join the CloudFlare Browser Developer program - which requires signing an NDA. Rightfully so, the project maintainer didn't want to do it.

    If you want to see the extent of what CloudFlare does to fingerprint the browsers, just have a look in the issue [2] and see which flags need to be disabled in order to allow CloudFlare to pass the challenge.

    I understand both sides, but at least CloudFlare could be flexible enough to fall back to PoW instead of just blocking people from sending forms or accessing websites...

    [1]: https://github.com/Danny-Dasilva/CycleTLS

    [2]: https://github.com/uazo/cromite/issues/2365

    • b65e8bee43c2ed0 1 day ago
      it's all for nothing, because Cloudflare's scraping protection works about as well as a $5 padlock - good enough to dissuade bored teens, not good enough to dissuade even an amateur burglar. if someone wants to scrap your publicly visible data, they will. there's nothing you can do.
      • ACCount37 1 day ago
        At the same time: it sure works well enough to annoy anyone with a "bad ASN" IP with 80 captchas a day.
        • shideneyu 23 hours ago
          exactly that's what I was thinking... like the day they provided a solution to the issue they posed
      • mootothemax 22 hours ago
        Exactly. I’m constantly amazed at how little you actually need to bypass CF, Amazon, Azure WAFs and so on (Incapsula springs to mind too). When you look at the code you’ve come up with, it’s actually quite small and compact.

        More to the point, these systems actually help scraping because proof of work unlocks essentially unlimited scraping, in my experience.

        That said - from my experience on the other side, sure you can’t stop people like me or you, but you can stop 99% of the others. That’s more than worth it operationally.

        • Chris2048 7 hours ago
          What do you mean by ~"PoW unlocks unlimited scraping"?
      • tracker1 4 hours ago
        If you're willing to do it, a real browser with playwright is enough.
        • lobocinza 2 hours ago
          Playwright isn't sufficient for all cases.
        • brookst 3 hours ago
          Not for high volumes of data.
      • ranger_danger 16 hours ago
        > Cloudflare's scraping protection works about as well as a $5 padlock

        It sure seems to keep me, the casual visitor, far away from just about any site they "protect". I have zero desire to alter my browsing configuration or use extra tools to get around turnstile, I'd rather not even visit the site in the first place.

        • aboardRat4 14 hours ago
          >, I'd rather not even visit the site in the first place

          Until your bank, airline, and tax ministry start using them.

          • account42 6 hours ago
            Even more reason to boycott sites using it now.
          • GoblinSlayer 8 hours ago
            I vote with my wallet and dump misbehaving banks.
            • rplnt 4 hours ago
              Overwhelming majority of customers doesn't even know they can care. And most of them wouldn't anyway. So your vote doesn't matter to anyone but you, sadly.
          • ranger_danger 13 hours ago
            [flagged]
    • leonidasrup 20 hours ago
      Fingerprinting for "bot protection" is indistinguishable from fingerprinting for mass surveillance.
      • brookst 3 hours ago
        Sure, this is the age-old “knife used to cut steak is indistinguishable from knife used to stab people” thing.

        Tools are inherently amoral; only people can have motives we can celebrate or condemn.

        • leonidasrup 2 hours ago
          Is the value provided by Cloudflare to public so great, that we are willing to pay for it by enabling mass surveillance?
          • SR2Z 13 minutes ago
            Considering how much of the internet is already trying to track me? Yeah, Cloudflare provides more than enough value.

            It's pretty clear that this is being done to solve an actual problem that they and their customers have. I'd prefer if it wasn't necessary, but I'll take this over solving challenges any day.

          • chii 2 hours ago
            > Is the value provided by Cloudflare to public so great

            turnstile is not a public good, it's a private product, promoted to private entities that want to achieve a certain outcome that is beneficial to them privately.

            The mass surveillance is a side-effect - an externality that cloudflare does not have to pay for (but we as netizens pay collectively).

            It is the role and responsibility of gov't to regulate away externality (or make those who benefit from it pay a cost somehow, to equalize said externality). Unfortunately, like with climate change, nothing has been forthcoming, and only a few people care about the actual damage enough to even talk about it.

            So it will go on, and the masses do not have a say.

          • brookst 2 hours ago
            That’s a better question. So far the answer seems to be yes.

            Large companies and banks see >95% fraud on sign in / sign up flows. It’s a constant battle and the law of large numbers says even a tiny false negative rate can be catastrophic.

            A bogus GCP or AWS or Azure account costs those companies hundreds to thousands of dollars. I don’t know what the average loss is on fraudulent bank signins, but probably on that order. And there are millions, sometimes billions of attempts per day.

            I worked at a tech company that used an off-brand, truly awful captcha provider. Think “drag the mammal to the habitat it lives in, avoiding the wiggly lines”. When this awful provider went down (frequently), we fell back to recaptcha. Fraud rates were 100x higher in those minutes-to-hours outages. Though of course real users were also able to get in at higher rates.

      • mornanding 10 hours ago
        Talking about mass surveillance: After taking the usual measurements against cross-site browser tracking- who knows most about my website visits? Meta, Google or Cloudflare? Blocking me from site visits with fingerprinting shut off, forces all my traffic back into the CF funnel. Number of websites soaring. Try it yourself https://sereneblue.github.io/chameleon https://github.com/kkapsner/CanvasBlocker/ and you're increasingly off.
      • account42 6 hours ago
        And incentives mean those doing the former will also do the latter.
      • UqWBcuFx6NV4r 8 hours ago
        Maybe if you’re severely unintelligent or intentionally being tone deaf to try to prove your point.
    • raxxorraxor 9 hours ago
      I would like my browser to not pass their challenge and then flush support of services I cannot reach. This is the only way for them to stop, to really get on the nerves of their customers.

      Those might ignore it, but there are always alternatives.

      • dchest 8 hours ago
        They'll just tell you to clear cookies and use Chrome.
      • UqWBcuFx6NV4r 8 hours ago
        That is delusional. Nobody is getting on anyone’s nerves, materially. The people who care about this are a rounding error of a rounding error.
        • brookst 3 hours ago
          It’s always amusing when someone brings up the “just tell banks that if they reduce account takeovers by 80%, it will drive off 3 customers a year (and those are the same 3 customers who call site support to complain the website doesn’t work well on their homebrew Chromium for when running on BSD”

          Cloudflare only exists in its current form because banks and such already enthusiastically accepted that trade off.

    • petu 23 hours ago
      > but unless you do PoW (which is also ecologically a nightmare)

      Can you expand? I don't see a problem with some napkin math. 5W load for 2 seconds is 0.002Wh (we have to let smartphones pass and not by doing PoW for 10s of seconds). 8 billion checks a day for a year = 8GWh.

      • denysvitali 23 hours ago
        I stand corrected. It's not a nightmare scenario (as for Bitcoins) - but I'm still of the idea that "useless" computations should be avoided (as we should avoid having 10MB websites).

        In any case, according to some napkin math done by Kimi 2.6 (which by itself is probably already consuming more than all of my PoW challenges for the upcoming 5 years) - the situation looks incredibly in favor of PoW: https://www.kimi.com/share/19e7ef40-a432-8912-8000-0000b4a71...

        Which makes me wonder why CloudFlare isn't switching to this already

        • tarpitt 13 hours ago
          There's a saying that if an idea is stupid, but it works, it's not stupid.

          If some computation is "useless" but it serves it's purpose, it's not useless.

          The reason why bitcoin network expends so much energy is down to tokenomics, not the system of PoW itself. At equilibrium we expect the power usage to be (blocks/hr) x (BTC/block) x ($/BTC) x (kWh/$), so it's a function of the BTC price and emission rate.

          PoW in other context has way different driving factors. In this case, the marginal improvement of fetching the site again for AI bots isn't enough to cover the PoW cost. The PoW cost is outweighed by the net bandwidth cost of all the parties.

          • brookst 3 hours ago
            I mean coal power plants work, so building new ones is not stupid by that standard.

            I think we have to expand the definition of stupid to include things that work but have net negative externalities. Not sure where PoW falls in that way of looking at things, but we should at least consider it.

            (Thinking about it, Captcha is PoW, just theoretically work by the human)

        • dcrazy 22 hours ago
          Because it doesn’t solve the problem of residential botnets.
          • Velocifyer 18 hours ago
            The botnet operators will be incentivized to mine bitcoin instead of whatever they are doing.
          • GoblinSlayer 7 hours ago
            Why not? PoW challenge doesn't whitelist botnets. If the dumb scraper makes only get requests and doesn't solve the challenge, it doesn't matter how it connects, even if it's a perfectly hidden tor exit node.
            • brookst 2 hours ago
              Because the work would be done by the compromised residential device. No bothnet owner is going to care if their 100,000 rooted routers have to do a little more work. It’s still “free” from their perspective.
          • dotancohen 19 hours ago
            Neither does fingerprinting.
            • dcrazy 14 hours ago
              The goal of Cloudflare’s fingerprinting is to detect whether a user agent appears to be a legitimate human. It’s not to identify human users across websites.
              • zzo38computer 14 hours ago
                That is not a good excuse for requiring overly complicated and overly specific software.
                • dcrazy 13 hours ago
                  Every HN thread is full of people who think webmasters should just pay through the nose to handle bot traffic to preserve the sacred rights of turbonerds to visit their website using Lynx on their toaster.
                  • zzo38computer 10 hours ago
                    I should think that there should be a better way (e.g. port knocking, instructions for manually correcting the URL that cannot easily be automated, additionally supporting alternative protocols, etc).
                    • brookst 2 hours ago
                      Sounds great. Link us to your project?
        • charcircuit 13 hours ago
          Because you can't have both a difficulty with a reasonable page load time and a difficulty that stops bad actors. Attackers have stronger machines and are willing to wait as long as they need to.
      • geysersam 10 hours ago
        8 billion checks per day sounds on the low end. I can imagine it being ten or hundred times more. That still seem pretty fine though. On the other hand, it's hard to see that such a modest energy cost would dissuade any attacks.
        • petu 4 hours ago
          > I can imagine it being ten or hundred times more

          I don't think I average even 2 captchas a day being terminally online, so 10 across every soul in the world sounds way too much for me. (we're ignoring bots it's meant to deter?)

          > it's hard to see that such a modest energy cost would dissuade any attacks.

          It's not against targeted attacks, but scrapping.

          And not about energy cost, but available compute power -- it requires scrapper to use browser with JS (or time commitment to reimplement PoW outside of JS), limits their request rate by CPU core count.

          • HumanOstrich 2 hours ago
            > I don't think I average even 2 captchas a day being terminally online, so 10 across every soul in the world sounds way too much for me. (we're ignoring bots it's meant to deter?)

            You're mixing up checks, fingerprinting, and PoW with a captcha being triggered because those didn't pass. The less abnormal your setup is, the fewer captchas you'll get.

            I agree with the rest of what you said.

            Also I think you mean "scraper" and not "scrapper".

    • account42 6 hours ago
      > but unless you do PoW (which is also ecologically a nightmare), probably fingerprinting is the way to go

      Only as long as legislation and law enforcement is off the table. Almost like we have those because everyone doing their own policing is not a reasonable way to run a society.

    • jorvi 19 hours ago
      Brave has aggressive fingerprinting protection, I have Auto-Shred (formerly Forgetful Browsing) turned on, I use VPN and yet I rarely get gated out.
      • high_priest 19 hours ago
        A testament to how well Brave protects you from being identified by [Cloudflare in this example]
        • jorvi 18 hours ago
          Not sure what you mean, Brave blows Firefox out of the water in terms of privacy protections. Firefox has milquetoast fingerprint protection and it doesn't even block ads. uBlock is worse than Brave's blocking by virtue of not being natively integrated.
    • miki123211 5 hours ago
      PoW doesn't fix anything if you have an army of zombie CCTV cameras and smart fridges at your disposal.

      It's either proof-of-humanity (increasingly hard to get in this day and age, particularly if accessibility is a concern), proof odf identity (even worse) or proof of system integrity, which is the least bad out of all the terrible options.

      • gspr 3 hours ago
        Why wouldn't PoW help? If it's tuned so that each device in that army takes 10 seconds instead of 10 milliseconds to make a request, have you not slowed the army down by a factor 1000?
        • nine_k 2 hours ago
          You just need 1000x more zombie fridges, which may be still acceptable for some bad actors.
          • denysvitali 2 hours ago
            But more expensive (to get). At the same time, the PoW would require more compute power do the same device will still be capped at the same rps
    • novok 9 hours ago
      Micropayments would be another one, but then governments and banks have to give up ~~financial control & surveillance~~ AML essentially to make it financially viable. AML also has a horrible track record of how much money is spent compared to the amount recovered.
      • actionfromafar 9 hours ago
        Wouldn't micropayments be aggregated into a money laundering operation by some third party? (Wasn't IIRC even Spotify used for that?) Or would Cloudflare take all the money in this hypothetical scenario?
    • fsckboy 18 hours ago
      >probably fingerprinting is the way to go - completely destroying the privacy of everyone involved

      your doctor seeing you naked does not destroy your privacy, it's your doctor sharing the photos with everybody that does. i.e. it problem here is that intermediaries like cloudflare don't work for you, they work for somebody else or sell the data themselves.

      • TurdF3rguson 9 hours ago
        Wait, is your doctor taking photos of you naked?
        • defrost 9 hours ago
          Molescan doctors do - they map the skin, log it, and look for changes over time.
    • gadders 21 hours ago
      They're also anti free speech.
    • jwr 23 hours ago
      > I don't want to defend them, because they gate away a good chunk of the internet with their "bot protection"

      They also gate away a good many people with their "bot protection". I am extremely worried about how so many seem to have outsourced the control over who can access their websites to a company, with no second thoughts whatsoever.

      • ethin 21 hours ago
        The problem is what is the alternative? I'm (not) defending them or this practice by any measure, but we all know what happens if you just open your site up without these, especially with AI bots which hammer servers and are in effect a legalized DDoS system. I've hated CAPTCHAs ever since I first encountered them and I can't wait for them to just finally die a permanent death, but I also don't know how we solve the "how do you identify a human and a bot" in a way which doesn't require server admins to have extremely beefy servers or similar setups to handle the extra load. I'm not going to do the "there HAS to be a way thing" either because, for all I know, this could just be one of those impossible-to-solve problems.
        • jwr 20 hours ago
          > we all know what happens if you just open your site up without these, especially with AI bots which hammer servers and are in effect a legalized DDoS system

          No, we don't know. I honestly do not understand the problem. I run websites, both static and non-static. Granted, my sites aren't exactly the most popular internet go-to destinations, but I should be seeing this DDoS too, right?

          I do see lots of requests. Nothing that any modern system can't handle. Computers are stupid fast these days. Unless you are doing something unreasonable, it's really hard to even notice this "extra load".

          I understand there are sites for whom this causes problems, but I think these are rare and could be optimized not to do unreasonable things.

          I think too many people are annoyed by AI companies (arguably understandable position), look at their logs and speak of "hammering", "DDoS" and "extra load", while in reality it doesn't matter much.

          • acdha 18 hours ago
            We do know, just ask anyone who runs a more popular site or does anything where abuse can be monetized (shopping, reviews, etc.). Avoiding that due to obscurity isn’t an answer because it’s saying you’re safe until something, possibly outside of your control, causes the bots to descend and give you an extra 500M requests with no chance of revenue.

            I’m with OP: I don’t like this but the alternatives all look like the death of the open web.

            • handoflixue 18 hours ago
              > just ask anyone who runs a more popular site

              The person you're responding to already said they ran a modestly sized site. What actual scale opens one up to abuse? If only the top 1% of sites need it, then it seems silly to say "everyone" needs it.

              • ceejayoz 17 hours ago
                It’s not just scale. Do you accept user generated content? If so, more of a target.
                • wizzwizz4 16 hours ago
                  Stack Overflow was outside of the Cloudflare network for years, and anti-abuse was maybe 3 or 4 full-time jobs – much of which still needs to be done, because Cloudflare's anti-bot protection hasn't actually stopped it. Most UGC sites are not as big as Stack Overflow was at its peak.
                  • ceejayoz 4 hours ago
                    Most UGC sites also don't have a horde of volunteer mods voting to close/delete things.
                    • wizzwizz4 3 hours ago
                      I'm referring specifically to the activities of Charcoal (https://charcoal-se.org/) and their Stack Exchange staff counterparts, taken together. This is about large-scale platform abuse, of the sort that Cloudflare is alleged to prevent (but doesn't, really), not the more mundane (and laborious) task of manual quality control.
                  • black_puppydog 14 hours ago
                    errr... so anything related to UGC now has a lower bound of 3-4 FTE? Sure, I'll hire a team of content moderators next time I think about putting a comment form under my blog...
                    • GoblinSlayer 7 hours ago
                      Yes? Cloudflare doesn't replace moderators. At all. It only allegedly filters bot generated content, it doesn't filter user generated content and doesn't even intend to.
                    • Dylan16807 13 hours ago
                      Please read their last sentence again and think about how much it understates the difference between stack overflow in its prime and a normal website. Also the "much of which still needs to be done".
              • daishi55 17 hours ago
                So everyone is paying cloudflare… why?
                • tardedmeme 5 hours ago
                  Because paying with MITM is far less visible than paying with money
                • fragmede 17 hours ago
                  Most likely not. Their free tier is fairly generous.
          • matt_heimer 19 hours ago
            It might depend on the tech stack. I run a small niche website but it has PHP and a database (MediaWiki/PHPBB) and without Cloudflare I'd estimate I'd need to spend several hundred dollars a month to handle the traffic. Traffic used to be tens of thousands of requests a day. AI has increased that to between 400k and 3M requests per day but it's not a smooth distribution. This is with bot fight mode on that greatly reduces traffic.

            I adopted Cloudflare because it was getting DDoSed by the AI crawlers. I'm pretty sure all of them are vibe coding their crawlers and don't bother adding rate limiting as a requirement.

            • jwr 1 hour ago
              That was my point. I was trying to be gentle by mentioning "unreasonable" things, but seriously — how did we get to the point where less than 6 requests per second (that's 500k requests per day) is considered a DDoS?

              I've spent some effort on optimizing my sites, but most of the effort was focused on avoiding unreasonable (stupid) work. Do I need a session for every request? No, I don't! Do I need a database fetch for every access to my homepage? No, I don't! Is it a problem to actually load all of my static content in all supported languages (24) into memory and serve it from memory? No, it isn't!

              I use Clojure behind nginx on the server for my sites. Oh, and I also pre-compress all static assets to Brotli, so anything that handles brotli gets a static file served directly from nginx. I also use immutable assets with unlimited caching semantics.

              Really — the problem is that we've grown lax and our software has become bloated, slow, and with unreasonable code paths. If every page fetch does 12 database accesses and runs through a slow interpreter, that is surely going to be a problem.

          • canyp 19 hours ago
            I second this. My website exposes a cgit and 99% of the traffic now is AI scraping the sources, but the load is nowhere near DoS territory. And this is running on the cheapest VPS I could find.

            Not saying I'm not annoyed by the scraping; I am looking to block them, but I'm also not going to put the site behind the gatekeeper. If anything, Cloudflare must love AI scraping now for the same reason AV companies love malware.

            Now, if you are running a PHP stack...yeah, maybe that's the problem right there.

            • ern_ave 42 minutes ago
              > 99% of the traffic now is AI scraping the sources

              I wonder if we should stop fighting this and instead create an API specifically for this purpose? Or, a central repository that you could send your data to and say to anyone wanting to scrape, "safe yourself some time and just get my data from this other place"

            • lxgr 17 hours ago
              Is there actually any plausible theory why "AI" would repeatedly scrape the same sites? Are there that many competing, completely independent AI labs? Is it cheaper to repeatedly scrape than to buffer the scraped data locally? (I find it very hard to imagine that it's easier to deal with changing/disappearing content than it is to stand up such a cache.)
              • jack_pp 15 hours ago
                If you ask an agent to check sources / function definitions of open source packages it will wget / curl it
              • GoblinSlayer 6 hours ago
                It's an AI generated scraper that scrapes nonstop.
            • account42 5 hours ago
              The PHP stack isn't even the problem, it's having unauthenticated requests getting past the cache in the first place, something that most sites should be able to prevent.
          • hombre_fatal 14 hours ago
            Consider yourself lucky. But don't let yourself fall into the trap of thinking it's a nonissue for everyone else until it happens to you.

            People shouldn't have to be experts or provision a larger server to run a UGC service that can withstand the sort of 30x more traffic I'm seeing from AI bots. Or rather, you didn't render the argument for why they should have to do that if they can just use CloudFlare's free tier.

            Either way, it's easy to have all the answers when you've never had the problem.

          • ethin 20 hours ago
            Has anyone pointed an AI scraper at your server at all? Unless your website appears in search engine listings I don't think the AI scrapers will slam it. My server has never been hit by them but my server is also practically unknown. All of this said, I'm not going to claim that server loads can handle it because many sysadmins have claimed otherwise, and I would like to think that their claims are reliable.
            • redox99 20 hours ago
              As soon as you get your TLS certificate you get bombarded with scraping. You don't need someone to "point a scraper at you".

              What matters most is usually how much there is to scrape. If you have like 5 pages that's nothing. For forum like websites where each thread, each user profile, etc. gets scraped that's when traffic increases. I just let them have at it with no issues though, computers are fast.

              • ethin 17 hours ago
                That's really weird. My experience is quite different: I have several subdomains and all of them have TLS certs and I haven't (yet) seen this (thankfully). Either that, or my server is masking it. The weird thing is that my server is an OVH dedicated box that doesn't exactly have top-tier specs, so I have no idea what's going on there. Very weird indeed.
                • redox99 17 hours ago
                  Probably you don't have much to scrape?
                  • ethin 15 hours ago
                    I mean... It may be that most of the things I run aren't really scrape-able. I run Matrix (which requires authentication), an XWiki instance, Zulip, Terraria, Forgejo, Nextcloud, a Mastodon server... Most of those require auth behind my Kanidm instance to actually do anything. Well and most of them have APIs that are much better than "scrape the universe".
              • GoblinSlayer 6 hours ago
                If you run the site on a custom port, scrapers won't find it?
            • userbinator 20 hours ago
              Also, how do we even know they're really "AI scrapers", or just a deliberate DDoS to push sites into using CF or other "anti-bot" providers?
              • danielheath 17 hours ago
                They showed up when the AI money did. The evidence is circumstantial, but… some of them are remarkably well engineered (from a “how difficult is it to identify this traffic” perspective, in a way that never existed before (I have been running a quite sizeable site for 8 years, over 200k registered users, and you don’t need to register to use 99% of it).
                • whstl 14 hours ago
                  I run a quite large website and there are a few patterns.

                  The usage is extremely quick, and follows easy-to-spot patterns. We noticed a spike in bounce rate.

                  They never come from Google, and the bad programmed ones just crawl several pages at a time, faster than a user could do.

                  Then there's the crazy spikes in visits from specific countries, pretty much scraping the entire content. Often from pools of IPs. In some cases had 30% unexplained (meaning: it wasn't viral or a marketing campaign) random sustained increases in traffic.

                  There's also the fact they don't interact with the complicated widgets, so zero XHR requests other than analytics pings.

                  They also don't cause spikes in Google Analytics, so I assume it's blocked, but they show up in logs and in the internal analytics.

                  It's not enough to DDOS the website at all, but it's a lot of noise in statistics that we gotta learn to filter.

                  • JimDabell 10 hours ago
                    > They never come from Google, and the bad programmed ones just crawl several pages at a time, faster than a user could do.

                    I’ve triggered this kind of “bot protection” right here on Hacker News many times. I did that by having a bunch of Hacker News pages open and then closing and reopening my browser. I’ve also triggered it by opening a bunch of links in the background too quickly. I’ve also triggered it by reading the article, then clicking back and upvoting/favouriting too quickly. I’m also located in Singapore, which people have started to advocate for blocking here recently.

                    A single non-bot legitimate user can easily trigger these kinds of heuristics just by using the site in a way you don’t expect. This can affect some users disproportionately more than others, e.g. disabled people who need to use assistive technology.

                    • whstl 7 hours ago
                      Oh I also do this all the time.

                      What I mean by "too fast" is opening 50 pages in the span of two or three milliseconds.

                      Either way, I'm not blocking. The CDN is handling the traffic alright.

                    • danielheath 7 hours ago
                      I hate that sort of thing - when I rolled my own proof-of-work bot protection (providers wanted $$$$), I set it up so that

                      A) you'd have to open >200 tabs, and B) if any tab solves the proof-of-work, any that are still waiting to do so reload in the background.

                • userbinator 15 hours ago
                  Yes, circumstantial is exactly the point; it's easy to use AI as a scapegoat because it's something popular to hate on.
                  • danielheath 14 hours ago
                    It's circumstantial evidence, but Occam's Razor also applies.

                    It's not a hostile DOS in the traditional sense (I've mitigated a few of those) - no "pay us to make it stop", no pattern to the requests other than "fetch every unique URL a few times".

                    It wasn't happening until financial incentives to gather large datasets for AI training appeared.

                    Bad actors (using residential proxies & claiming to be a real browser) mostly showed up after folk started blocking ones that identified themselves as AI scrapers.

                    It's obvious to blame AI training because there's a shortage of better explanations. Who else would be paying for these (expensive) residential botnets, only to use them to (eg) web-scrape wikipedia (which offers free downloads of its content in a structured format)?

                    The simplest explanation of the technical behavior is "a bot coded to follow every link it sees & save the results", and the simplest explanation of the motive to run such a bot is "to train a large language model".

                    • userbinator 13 hours ago
                      no "pay us to make it stop"

                      "use Cloudflare to make it stop"

                      • danielheath 12 hours ago
                        Or fastly, or akamai, or bunny, or any number of other providers.

                        Cloudflare are merely the cheapest of the bunch.

                        • userbinator 11 hours ago
                          Exactly. They (and most of all, Big G) stand to profit greatly from this browser discrimination. What better than to make more sites use them by launching DDoS attacks in the name of "AI scraping".
          • dr_um 19 hours ago
            A small, single EU country focused non-static e-commerce, with proper robots.txt instructions that worked perfectly well in the search & co bots -only "era" with rate limiting for nginx/php-fpm setup - is kinda struggling without CF to handle 15000 requests per 15 minutes, coming from Chrome "users" from IPv6. Best so far was an avg. server load in htop = 40 on an 8-core server x_x
            • redox99 17 hours ago
              That's 16.6rps. A single guy holding the F5 key on chrome can generate that much traffic and take down your website. That kind of performance was never acceptable.
              • bschwindHN 14 hours ago
                People will always reframe their request numbers to avoid stating their pitiful requests per second numbers, it's hilarious. "This thing is handling hundreds of thousands of requests per day!" Like cool, you're barely making it double digit requests per second.
            • PunchyHamster 18 hours ago
              > handle 15000 requests per 15 minutes,

              that's just ~17 req/sec

              That's "cheap VPS running wordpress" level of traffic

              • BenjiWiebe 4 hours ago
                Maybe a plain WordPress install. Run something like WooCommerce and install a bunch of plugins to get the functionality that WordPress and WooCommerce should have built-in, and suddenly a cheap VPS can only handle 2 or 3 requests per second.

                It's phenomenal how inefficient the WordPress/WooCommerce stack is.

                Though the main issue I'm seeing is credit card testing, not scraping.

                And I'm ideologically opposed to using a CDN (because it shouldn't be needed for such a small site!) so it's somewhat a self-inflicted problem...

                • PunchyHamster 3 hours ago
                  "Security" plugins are also HUGE problem here, most of them turns "few cached DB SELECTs" (or static file read if you use caching plugin) into now a bunch of inserts, just to log/analyze "offender" IP and maybe block it, in many cases turning "blocking offender" to be more costly that would be serving the page without the security plugin
            • codedokode 12 hours ago
              You can calculate traffic stats for a day by IPs/subnets and probably bots will stand out. If they are using IPv6 you can figure out the ASN and block it completely.
            • canyp 18 hours ago
              Block out IPv6 and see if that helps.
              • lxgr 17 hours ago
                Why not block all odd v4 addresses while you're at it? I heard that that can reduce scraping volume by 50%!
                • ssl-3 15 hours ago
                  That's harder to set up, and also unfair to people who have an odd IP address.

                  It's easier and better to just block 0.0.0.0/1 half of the time, and 128.0.0.0/1 for the other half of the time. Switch every day at noon.

                  Bot traffic will be cut by 50%, and humans are all treated equally! It's a total win!

                  • tardedmeme 5 hours ago
                    And blocking ipv6 addresses isn't unfair to people who have an ipv6 address?
                • ipaddr 15 hours ago
                  Blocking Singapore reduces the AI load 90%.
          • redox99 20 hours ago
            You get downvoted for these opinions but I agree. Most people that complain that their servers get hammered by AI bots are those that run very unoptimized servers that can only handle like 100 rps. I've never had any issues with any of my moderately optimized websites. A $10 VPS can handle sooo much traffic.
            • CodeBytes 18 hours ago
              I think people get annoyed when it's suggested they spend time optimising or even re-writing their websites to handle high traffic loads just to cater to AI bots ripping their content.

              It's also not always easy to do. I run a small wiki which is fairly optimised, nearly every page manages at least ~3k rps on a small VPS. The only exception is the diff page which is ~150 rps. Optimising that while still giving good output isn't that easy, but the wiki doesn't have many users so that would be fine if it wasn't for the AI bots.

              The AI bots ignore robots.txt and were initially hitting the site with ~1k rps crawling every combination. Even that would be manageable as there's currently ~150,000 combinations, except they kept re-crawling the whole lot each day. The server could manage it but it was a massive waste of resources.

              They were using residential IPs and only sending 1 request from each IP making it impossible to block. In the end I gave up and put a Cloudflare challenge in front of it. I don't want to use Cloudflare but the alternative is forcing users to login to view diffs or remove them entirely.

              • redox99 17 hours ago
                What I do is have more strict rate limits for non logged in users. You tell them to log in if they hit the rate limit. For non logged in users, you have a rate limit not just for IP, but also for /24 and /16. Forget about IPv6, IPv4 scarcity is a feature not a bug.
                • CodeBytes 13 hours ago
                  The bot I had was using unique IPs for each request. Some were from cloud providers but most were just random residential ISPs. I couldn't see any obvious connections so rate limiting would've had to be a global rate limit.

                  Similar to the one SQLite had: https://www2.sqlite.org/forum/forumpost/7d3eb059f81ff694?t=h

                  Each IP only makes ~1 request though so easy to detect after the fact.

                  I guess they will run out of IPs at some point so maybe if I had logged each one forever and shown a challenge only to them, it would have fixed it eventually. Just depends how big their pool of IPs is.

                  • redox99 8 hours ago
                    You were getting 1k rps, and each request was from an unique IP? So after an hour you got hit by 3.6M different IPs? And all from uncorrelated /16s? That seems hard to believe. Not that I don't believe you, it's just hard for me to grasp that whoever was scraping you had such a large and distributed swarm.
                    • tardedmeme 5 hours ago
                      This is called rotating residential proxy service. You can buy it off grey market sites that are probably getting it from botnet operators. It costs about $2-$5 per GB.
              • account42 5 hours ago
                There really isn't a good reason for a wiki (or git host) to provide diffs between arbitrary revisions to unauthenticated users. Limit it to diffs compared to previous (which can be cached) and this problem goes away.

                In any case, such labyrinths of expensive dynamically generated pages are no excuse for subjecting people requesting the start page to bot checks.

              • Velocifyer 3 hours ago
                I see many mediawiki wikis (like the Arch Linux wiki) using anubis succsefully. It can be configured to only act on certain paths.
              • canyp 18 hours ago
                Curious, but how do the bots figure out the combinations? Or do you have links to the diffs from other sites? I assume the diff takes two files in query parameters or something.
                • CodeBytes 13 hours ago
                  I'm not 100% sure but I think links. There's a bunch on the history and revision pages. Yeah, the diff URL has two revision ID's as parameters.

                  I did try removing some of the links without success. I guess once they have them they just keep checking.

            • Dylan16807 13 hours ago
              I managed to solve my scraper problems without optimizing much, but if I had to optimize I think the only option might be "don't use mediawiki" and that's an extremely obnoxious solution. Though maybe I could get there by throttling specific kinds of pages.
          • piker 17 hours ago
            Same. Tritium and the blog have done stents on the front page here and high traffic subreddits and that plus bots has never been a problem. UX could be improved through a CDN but even that isn’t worth the trade-off for us at the moment.
          • JohnTHaller 17 hours ago
            If you're in any way semi-popular and a decent size, you're gonna get hammered. PortableApps.com was partially offline for weeks due to China-based AI scrapers. You block the useragent, they start hitting you with another one from the same IP in the same way. You block the IP, they switch to another. You block the subnet, they use another. At one point it was nearly a thousand different IPs from around China hammering away. For all intents and purposes, a DDoS. This wasn't a little "extra load", this was load that was thousands of times beyond what our legitimate userbase was using.

            And if you're thinking about blocking all of China, while this particular AI bot didn't use them, a bunch of other ones I've encountered use VPNs and hacked clients worldwide.

          • RHSeeger 16 hours ago
            > I understand there are sites for whom this causes problems, but I think these are rare and could be optimized not to do unreasonable things.

            There are. They're not. They can't (without significant effort)

        • xg15 20 hours ago
          I don't think it's just privacy, it also increasingly turns the web itself into a walled garden. The end result is that websites can only ever be accessed by "approved" clients - the latest Chrome, Edge, Safari and if you're lucky Firefox - and nothing else.
          • robertlagrant 17 hours ago
            > and if you're lucky Firefox

            I haven't had any problems with Firefox so far. Why do you say this?

            • xg15 17 hours ago
              That was more a (gloomy) outlook into the future, given Chrome's market dominance and tendency for unilateral actions in web standards.
              • robertlagrant 17 hours ago
                I haven't ever noticed Cloudflare having any issues on Firefox, so presumably that implies any unilateral actions in web standards have been worked around by CF to provide the service to Firefox as well.
                • amatecha 15 hours ago
                  I'm pretty frequently blocked by Cloudflare when I use Firefox on OpenBSD -- apparently it's too suspicious of a combination for their liking, or something. Even on Linux I've occasionally had issues. I've had to email site operators to ask them to change their configuration so I can actually be a customer of their business.
            • account42 5 hours ago
              It's already a problem with Firefox + some essential web condom extensions.
        • account42 6 hours ago
          > we all know what happens if you just open your site up without these, especially with AI bots which hammer servers and are in effect a legalized DDoS system

          So delegalize it. Strip searching everyone to paper over the fact that the societal contract has been broken only delays that.

        • adgjlsfhk1 14 hours ago
          I think there's some chance we get a "proof of purchase" system where there is some entity that takes a $10 payment to give out a unique identity token that you need to present to visit most sites. if you have a revocation process for ones used for bad actors, it seems like it would work pretty well.
          • tardedmeme 5 hours ago
            That's called an IP address. You pay your ISP $50+ every month to get one. Has it worked so far?
            • BenjiWiebe 4 hours ago
              If the bad guys also had to pay $50/month/IP it would probably work.

              The bad guys don't pay that much. And sometimes the bad guys actually use the IPs of other people (botnets on residential IPs) and don't pay anything at all.

          • patrakov 10 hours ago
            Except if your country is under sanctions.
        • codedokode 12 hours ago
          > AI bots which hammer servers

          You can easily calculate which IPs/networks bots are using by looking at where most traffic comes from and who requests lot of pages with non-human speed.

        • hem777 8 hours ago
          The alternative is not have that one choke point that can be hammered. Decentralize.
        • arrty88 12 hours ago
          I use CF and i don’t enable these anti bot measures. It’s up to the web master
        • PunchyHamster 18 hours ago
          We have few dozen websites, from ones doing single digit Mbit to few Gbits.

          Never needed it. Just put the worst offenders in penalty bucket and that's usually enough

        • Unit327 9 hours ago
          Anubis is one alternative, kinda sucks that we need to slow down the web for everyone a little bit though.
        • steelframe 19 hours ago
          The most plausible near-term path is probably micropayments embedded invisibly in AI agents. Your agent that has learned what you value and can make a reasonable decision to allow a micropayment for certain content pays on your behalf without requiring a conscious decision each time, eliminating the mental transaction cost problem entirely. It's the mental transaction cost that arguably led to the failure of the micro payment model back in the early 2000s.

          Although the cynical part of me says that this will result in malicious actors trying to trick agents into giving out a bunch of micro payments. There are counter defenses that can help detect and compensate for that, but perhaps the best we will be able to do is prompt user with the default agent recommendation.

      • binaryturtle 22 hours ago
        I can no longer access any website that's "protected" by Cloudflare. As soon a website enables that stuff… "Shoot, another one bites the dust." I wonder if the website owners realise at all how many actual users they lose by this sort of "protection."
        • tardedmeme 21 hours ago
          Cloudflare will just tell them that 70% traffic drop is because 70% of their traffic was bots, and everything is working fine, and hey, don't you want to upgrade to a paid plan to block 50% of the remainder? Think about how many bots will be blocked with that upgrade!
        • CrimsonRain 21 hours ago
          I'm one of those who have enabled cloudflare on all of the sites I maintain. Additionally, Added turnstile on every form.

          I know some actual users get blocked. But the amount of spam we get without it, the amount of bot traffic simply overwhelming the server... It is just too much.

          Recently I also hard blocked all IPs from china Singapore India Pakistan Russia and whole of africa. Do I want to do it? No. But the amount of bot traffic and corresponding spam is a bigger problem :(

          • jp_sc 15 hours ago
            I also always block traffic from China, India, Pakistan, and Russia, after observing that 90%+ of the spam/scanning was coming from those countries.

            At least for China, I imagine most of the real humans might use a VPN anyway

          • brandonwindson 5 hours ago
            Yea, honest admins block entire regions because spam and bot traffic make it impossible to stay open
          • dotancohen 19 hours ago

              > I know some actual users get blocked. But the amount of spam we get without it, the amount of bot traffic simply overwhelming the server... It is just too much.
            
            So why not just shut down the website? Or remove the form entirely? That will ensure that you get no spam, right?

            One of the core tenets of system design is Availability. If your service is not available - if your forms are blocking legitimate users - then why are you pretending to have a form submission feature at all? Just to frustrate users?

            • coryrc 18 hours ago
              > One of the core tenets of system design is Availability. If your service is not available

              The service won't be available to anybody because of overwhelming unwanted traffic. Now it's available for most potential users. You're speaking econ 101 when everyone else has played out iterated prisoner's dilemmas.

            • epistasis 14 hours ago
              > So why not just shut down the website? Or remove the form entirely? That will ensure that you get no spam, right?

              Turns out that people have a tolerance for a non-zero amount of work, but still have a limit.

              Suggesting "turn off your website" is does not account for the desire to also provide some access.

              Treat people who host content as humans, just as we must treat users as humans. There are tradeoffs, suggesting "shut down your website unless you provide access everywhere" is worse on all fronts for everyone.

              • Dylan16807 12 hours ago
                > There are tradeoffs, suggesting "shut down your website unless you provide access everywhere" is worse on all fronts for everyone.

                Maybe, maybe not.

                If block-heavy websites shut down entirely, we lose some content, but other content moves to block-minimal sites and the average user might be able to access more.

                Also if there's no blocking crutch, and people get pushed into shutdown and are mad about it, they might fight harder for anti-spam technology and legal enforcement, which could improve the situation.

                • BenjiWiebe 1 hour ago
                  Well I administer an ecommerce site, and for the checkout page I block everything besides Canada and USA.

                  Because those are the only two countries that we've ever in the life of our business, had a legitimate order from.

                  It prevents the majority of credit card testing, but it is tempting to apply it to the whole site to reduce traffic and server load.

          • aboardRat4 14 hours ago
            [flagged]
            • account42 5 hours ago
              Actually you are. It's called living in country. Lawless countries don't get blocked. If you don't like it, clean up your country.
        • gruez 21 hours ago
          >I wonder if the website owners realise at all how many actual users they lose by this sort of "protection."

          How many people do you think are browsing with a weird enough config (eg. custom browser like OP, or some weird config like firefox with fingerprinting protection on a raspeberry pi) to trip cloudflare's protection?

          • binaryturtle 21 hours ago
            Well… I know plenty people in my circle affected by this. Just have a slightly outdated system you simply can't afford to update: it's way to easy to get cut off like this. IMHO, a rather systematic discrimination of poorer people.
          • benhurmarcel 19 hours ago
            I got locked out of some websites by Cloudflare Turnstile on some very standard configurations, like an iPhone on Safari, or a Windows 11 desktop with Firefox or Edge, neither with a VPN on. I never found out why.
            • hatsix 18 hours ago
              it's probably because a scraper farm updated their services to latest, and there was a window where fingerprinting was unable to differentiate.

              We had all of our Devs Pixels get blocked, and after talking to CF, it was because Internet archive was rebooted their scraping farm, all the devices stampeded and overwhelmed the known bot safeguards, and those tags were added across the board. CF gives sites the tools to tune what is getting blocked, we bumped the sensitivity down to 25 and haven't had many complaints (despite having a very vocal community)

              The most common complaint is users' IP address getting blocked because of compromised devices

          • p_l 18 hours ago
            Does not have to be weird, at least once it happened to me that their strictest settings simply banned something like major portion of internet users in my country - to the point that if you had FTTH you were likely blocked.

            And no, it wasn't due to a country-based block selected by site operator.

          • marticode 12 hours ago
            I use a plain Firefox on a plain Windows 11 PC on a plain regular mass market ISP in a developed country and I get completely blocked by websites daily.

            At least let me complete a "prove you are human" challenge or something, but don't outright ban my IP address?

          • KingMob 11 hours ago
            Weird? I live in Thailand, use Firefox, and get half a dozen CF challenges per day.

            It takes very little for CF to consider you "weird".

          • ranger_danger 19 hours ago
            There are dozens of us :)

            In my experience what really makes it loop every single time though is JShelter. CF doesn't like having your fingerprintable data bits messed with.

            There are legitimate uses for non-instrusive, ethical and legal scraping, but some of us have had to resort to extreme measures:

            https://roundproxies.com/blog/bypass-bot-detection/

            • Bender 19 hours ago
              Do you by chance have that installed? I don't use Cloudflare but I am curious if that code can scrape my silly blog? [1] Trying to pick the appropriate article... I'm guessing it can. I don't do the fancy javascript or TLS fingerprint inspections, just some janky hill-billy protections, silly redirects and Antarctic voodoo.

              [1] - https://blawg.nochan.net/b/Internet-Crap/20260522-Maybe-AI-B...

        • 8bitsrule 18 hours ago
          >wonder if the website owners realise at all how many actual users they lose by this sort of "protection.

          Yesterday cloudflare blocked me from visiting the MX-Linux site ... including an old browser with -no- protections ...

          I have to wonder - assuming these sites are paying CF for this 'service' - are they getting a list of all the fejected IPs?

        • dwedge 19 hours ago
          I took the time to write to one on LinkedIn and they didn't reply
      • Rapzid 14 hours ago
        > with no second thoughts whatsoever

        As someone responsible for mitigating card testing "attacks", account harvesting, and DDOS attacks..

        It is unfortunate, but the ISP industries(from telco up to transit) and CC industries aren't providing a lot of great options. This idea that people are doing things "without a second thought" is usually false when it comes to businesses.

      • denysvitali 23 hours ago
        They sometimes have to comply with legal requests (which I understand), but at the same time they have a huge market share - which means that the internet is becoming less and less decentralized and more in their control. We've seen the effects of that in previous outages...
      • Terr_ 12 hours ago
        I think what gives me anxiety about the whole situation is:

        1. If X% of the population gets wrongly branded with the scarlet letter B[ot], how do they appeal and get it fixed?

        2. How will sites notice and know if their choice of "bot protection" is losing them X% of users/customers/job-seekers etc.? If it's a really robust system, they'll never even see the complaints either...

        3. If everyone does detect that something is awry, will it be such a monopoly that there's no choice but to let it happen?

      • segmondy 17 hours ago
        I use a cellphone internet provider, there have been many a sites I couldn't access because or cloudflare or stupid recaptcha. i know damn well what a bicycle, bus, traffic light or stairs is.
      • stackghost 22 hours ago
        >I am extremely worried about how so many seem to have outsourced the control over who can access their websites to a company, with no second thoughts whatsoever.

        I think the Web is on its last legs, anyway. Generative AI and LLM-instead-of-search has destroyed what little value remained.

        • matheusmoreira 15 hours ago
          Governments too. It's inevitable that the international network will fracture into multiple national networks with heavy filtering at the borders as each country scrambles to impose their laws on it.

          I'm glad to have known the true internet before its demise. Truly one of the wonders of humanity.

      • tardedmeme 21 hours ago
        It's just one more facet of the enshittoscene, the era where actual product quality is completely irrelevant. Put it in the same bucket as websites that lag when you scroll, apps that refuse to show you video without a huge play/pause button overlaid in the middle of it that never goes away, and the movie Melania. My hypothesis is that billion-dollar businesses no longer exist to sell things to customers, but only to impress other billionaires to get their investment money.
    • PearlRiver 1 day ago
      This is why I have two separate browsers. If you want to do official stuff like paying for things you need to get through cloudflare.
      • notafox 23 hours ago
        You can use Firefox with different profiles and configure it to launch particular profile directly, without launching default profile and using about:profiles.

        Firefox with a non-default profile can be created like that:

          ./firefox -CreateProfile "profile-name /home/user/.mozilla/firefox/profile-dir/"
          # For, say, cloudflare that would be:
          ./firefox -CreateProfile "cloudflare /home/user/.mozilla/firefox/cloudflare/"
        
        And you can launch it like that:

          ./firefox -profile "/home/user/.mozilla/firefox/profile-dir/"
          # For cloudflare that would be:
          ./firefox -profile "/home/user/.mozilla/firefox/cloudflare/"
        
        So, given that /usr/bin/firefox is just a shell script, you can

            - create a copy of it, say, /usr/bin/firefox-cloudflare
            - adjust the relevant line, adding the -profile argument
        
        If you use an icon to run firefox (say, /usr/share/applications/firefox.desktop), you'll need to do copy/adjust line for the icon.

        Of course, "./firefox" from examples above should be replaced with the actual path to executable. For default installation of Firefox the path would be in /usr/bin/firefox script.

        So, you can have a separate profiles for something sensitive/invasive (linkedin, cloudflare, shops, banks, etc.) and then you can have a separate profile for everything else.

        And each profile can have its own set of extensions.

        • tardedmeme 21 hours ago
          They're blocking Firefox quite often. Stripe does something that makes Firefox hang. I use Chrome for those sites and then go back to Firefox...
        • spopejoy 3 hours ago
          What does profile-switching provide that switching containers within a single profile doesn't?

          Edit: I RTFA'd, containers can't adjust `privacy.resistfingerprinting`. Boo

        • t_mahmood 22 hours ago
          You do now do this from `Profiles` menu too, without going down to CLI path. It's extremely simple now.
          • notafox 20 hours ago
            If that works for you - that's fine.

            I'd argue, that for some, CLI path is actually cleaner.

            You see, the way described above creates entirely separate points of entry, and you don't have to go to the central menu to launch specific profile.

            It eliminates one step (Profile Manager, about:profiles or whatever) allowing you to get faster to the desired profile - same way you'd launch a default profile.

            It's logical separation too. It's like separate browsers from UX standpoint (they do use the same distribution though ...unless they aren't - you can configure different distributions for different profiles - nothing stops you from that).

            • t_mahmood 19 hours ago
              We are not in any kind of disagreement :)

              I'm just leaving the information about the gui option to other who may not be aware that it can be done from the gui too, and think its difficult to do in Firefox.

        • ferfumarma 23 hours ago
          Except that fingerprinting means that both profiles are actually tied together by cloudflare (and other tech companies)
          • VoidWhisperer 22 hours ago
            I think the idea is that they have the functionality that cloudflare is using to generate the fingerprint (like webGL in this case) disabled in their non-cloudflare profile and only use the cloudflare profile to do things they have to that are behind cloudflare
          • ranger_danger 16 hours ago
            that's why I use completely different browsers with different settings. my CF-friendly one (not my daily driver) is `firejail --private chromium` so it always starts with a clean temporary profile
      • helterskelter 1 day ago
        Firefox added profile switching recently. Works good.

        (That said, I still keep separate machines. One for doing "official" things, the other for everything else)

        • notafox 23 hours ago
          > Firefox added profile switching recently.

          I think this was as recent as 25 years ago?

          Recently they added some new UI. There was and still is (I think) classic Profile Manager UI, which you can launch with

            ./firefox -ProfileManager
          
          or access UI in about:profiles.

          But you don't have to use any of those anyway - see my comment above (a response to parent).

          • opem 22 hours ago
            They actually have at least 3 kinds of profile: 1. containers - As they say its somekind of sandbox, technically a profile 2. profiles that are accesible through about:proflies, which they had for years, and probably the one you are talking about... 3. New profiles that comes with a pop-up much like how chromium browsers shows it
          • thayne 22 hours ago
            The old UI was pretty difficult to use, and hard to discover unless you knew where to look though.
            • zelphirkalt 5 hours ago
              What about the old UI is difficult to use? I am assuming you are talking about the profile manager.
        • ajb 1 day ago
          Odd - they've had that for years, but only on the command line. Wonder if it's different under the hood? They also have firefox containers which also never quite became a first-class feature (you have to install a plugin).
        • b65e8bee43c2ed0 1 day ago
          >Works good.

          does it? same binary, same machine, same display, same 781 other heuristics.

    • choppaface 12 hours ago
      besides proof-of-work, is there any realistic alternative to fingerprinting?
    • himata4113 12 hours ago
      I mean all bot protection is useless at the end of the day, every time I have to bypass it I can do so in roughly 3 to 5 hours both 2 years and and more recently around 1 month ago. 2 years ago it was an absolute joke and only took me 30 minutes.

      Well I mean maybe it wasn't useless 2 years ago, but in the age of AI it definitely is.

    • sandeepkd 22 hours ago
      > I don't want to defend them, because they gate away a good chunk of the internet with their "bot protection", but unless you do PoW (which is also ecologically a nightmare), probably fingerprinting is the way to go - completely destroying the privacy of everyone involved.

      Bot protection with fingerprinting is just an illusion. Any signals like this which is on client side can be spoofed by an above average person. Fingerprinting is just way to consolidate the market for advertising business. Assigning Reputation to residential IP addresses and commercial blocks is is another approach to achieve the desired result. Providers would be a lot more careful to allow their IP addresses for misuses, however turns out that it would bring down the DDOS business on both sides, attackers and protectors.

      Ironically, more than often its the same companies that invest in building their own bots and finding ways to stop bots from other companies.

      • esrauch 21 hours ago
        > Bot protection with fingerprinting is just an illusion. Any signals like this which is on client side can be spoofed by an above average person.

        At the upper bound, fraud can always be committed by paying real people with real accounts to perform the desired action in a way that is 100% truly indistinguishable from organic. There's fundamentally actual prevention technique at the limit.

        So the entire game is only "increasing the costs until it's not viable ROI", not "holistically prevent", which is why fingerprinting is a relevant technique here.

        • sandeepkd 19 hours ago
          > entire game is only "increasing the costs until it's not viable ROI", not "holistically prevent", which is why fingerprinting is a relevant technique here.

          As per cloudlare's own report, about 78% of the DDOS attacks are at the network layer where the fingerprinting technique is not useful.

          DDOS is done against targets for certain reasons, most businesses are not even viable targets for everyone.

          However letting everyone being fingerprinted on the pretext of solving the DDOS is where the privacy gets compromised (not much of it is left though). Some search engines did it indirectly by letting people use tag managers for free in their website and then utilize the data for their advertising business.

          Relatively the end game is same, its just how these companies are approaching it.

    • jchw 15 hours ago
      JA3 fingerprinting is really not a serious deterrent, there are many ways to get around that. curl-impersonate works. You can even just use an actual Chrome instance with the devtools protocol, seems to pass as long as you don't use headless mode.

      The WebGL fingerprinting thing is cute, too. I guess it'll buy them some time since off-the-shelf solutions are going to probably not handle this well yet. That said, as long as the reward for bypassing turnstile and other anti-bot protections remains high, these things really can't do much. A decently resourced adversary can probably come up with a dozen different approaches to make this less useful. Without really looking into it much, my kneejerk is you could probably tweak Mesa to have deterministically random behavior for whatever edge cases it looks for, but you could also just have lots of different GPU/driver combos to proxy to. The web gets less open, but in an asymmetrical way. If you really have an incentive to keep botting, you'll surely find a way.

      The next step is to fully give up and just essentially implement WEI. And then the bot problem disappears?

      Nope. Botting will still hold tremendous value, so likely there will be many crafty workarounds and bypasses over time. And there will be countermeasures for those and workarounds for that. Guess we'll start to find out who actually has the resources and incentives to keep botting in this environment.

      So what's the real solution? Well the most obvious thing to do would be to make botting less valuable. Can we? I dunno. It may have been a mistake to move so many important things to the Internet after all. I mean, some of this is just threat actors catching up with what's possible and was inevitable to begin with. But, some of it is just trying to find solutions to problems that were unnecessary to begin with. Or failing to implement solutions despite an obvious need to do so.

      There are a lot of threads to pull on, here. Account takeover still holds tremendous value to threat actors. Why? In my opinion, it's because passkeys were a tremendous failure, no matter what adoption shows. If we wanted to just improve security for users, I think we didn't need to restructure the internet around another authentication mechanism that of course, provides attestation capabilities, we could've just improved on passwords. For more secure handling of passwords, PAKEs exist. Password managers exist. For anti-phishing, TOTPs exist. What if you could have the exact same passkey experience, but in such a way that everything can gracefully fallback to just passwords and TOTP, because they're the real keymatter at the end of it? Add a web standard that lets browsers and browser extensions hook into the login process, standardize PAKEs as part of the web. Cross-vendor syncronization? A problem easily solved if we ever wanted to.

      Instead of that, we got the dumbest possible world. Passkeys are sometimes available, but often not. Can you sync your passkeys across devices? Probably, maybe they have blacklisted KeepassXC by now so maybe I can't :)

      But a lot of stuff doesn't even offer me the option to use passkeys, so they still use passwords. Can I enter my password to log in still? No, of course not. See, I will helpfully get the option to enter my password, in addition to the option to use email or SMS, the most secure authentication scheme known to Man, but if I actually select password and enter my secure password from my secure password manager, what I get to find out is that the password option is actually password and email or SMS and there's no option to use TOTP. Oh, and you randomly get logged out for no reason sometimes.

      Some of the bots will probably disappear. Like, whatever bot is throwing me several terabytes of nonsense traffic every month will probably eventually disappear since they're wasting so much bandwidth on doing literally nothing. I have no idea what the point is, but I know it can't be terribly valuable for them, and it's not terribly expensive for me. I'd love to know who the hell is doing that and why, though.

      But since the web is ran mostly by crap companies like Google, it will never get its shit together, and we will get solutions like WEI and identitity verification to solve problems that were entirely manufactured (or caused by a significant lack therefore of) in the first place.

      • NamlchakKhandro 13 hours ago
        It's completely fucked.

        By virtue of incompetent and ignorant Devs and middle managers. Our by virtue of greed and maliciousness.

        Yeah yeah never attribute to malice what can be explained by stupidity... This time no. It's both.

    • stellamariesays 1 hour ago
      [flagged]
    • bawolff 14 hours ago
      > I don't want to defend them, because they gate away a good chunk of the internet with their "bot protection", but unless you do PoW (which is also ecologically a nightmare), probably fingerprinting is the way to go - completely destroying the privacy of everyone involved.

      I hate what the anti scrapper mechanisms have become but it really is the lesser evil. The alternative for many small operators is to just completely shutdown.

  • jeroenhd 22 hours ago
    > Plus privacy.resistfingerprinting isn't enabled even when selecting "Strict" "Enhanced Privacy Protection" in the settings, great job there Mozilla.

    For good reason. I've run that setting for ages but I kept having to disable it and add workarounds because websites would break in weird ways. Timezones in scheduling websites being messed up nearly made me miss a couple of appointments. There's no way to tell the user Firefox isn't broken without displaying a permanent banner like "if websites are broken in any way or you see weird glitches or your computer's time is wrong or fonts look weird or videos don't always work right, click here to disable fingerprinting protection".

    Interestingly, Turnstile breaks with resistfingerprinting but works with fingerprintingProtection, I guess the latter takes this crap into account.

    • drnick1 11 hours ago
      > Timezones in scheduling websites being messed up nearly made me miss a couple of appointments.

      The reason for spoofing the time zone (to UTC) is that it is one of the many things used to fingerprint users. There is an unintended side effect however: a mismatch with the IP geolocation could out you as a VPN user even if no VPN is actually used.

      • miki123211 5 hours ago
        It's quite incredible how much you can learn about a person just by knowing their user agent, country of origin and list of preferred languages.

        When Youtube still supported trends, visiting the trends page from Poland with Safari set to English gave you really interesting results. Mostly intellectually-stimulating content from channels like Veritasium, with a smattering of reviews, trailers, music and focus soundtracks thrown in. Meanwhile, visiting that same page on (Windows) Chrome set to Polish gave you the typical "you won't believe what this man just did!!!" crap.

      • jeroenhd 8 hours ago
        Of course, but the impact on many web stuff was one of the reasons I didn't turn the option on as part of my standard Firefox setup anymore.
    • croes 22 hours ago
      Maybe a good reason for not enabling it by default but a bad reason to not enabling it for strict settings.

      I somewhat expect breaking sites with strict settings, I don’t expect an still wide open tracking path.

      That’s deceiving.

      • jeroenhd 8 hours ago
        Even with resistFingerprinting, websites will be able to fingerprint you. There is no full immunity against fingerprinting.

        Websites already break often with the strictest protections enabled, adding a "super duper strict protections" mode will just lead to bug reports. Even more-than-bare-basic tracking prevention has HN threads full of comments like "doesn't work on <Firefox fork>" because they don't see the connection between fingerprinting protection, WebRTC/WebGL/WebGPU, and websites not working.

        People who are willing to take that bet can enable it in about:config.

        • croes 3 hours ago
          > Websites already break often with the strictest protections enabled, adding a "super duper strict protections" mode will just lead to bug reports.

          That’s what I‘m saying. They already break because of other effects of the strict settings, so what is the benefit of leaving resistFingerprinting turn off?

          > There is no full immunity against fingerprinting.

          There is 0 immunity if you don’t even try.

          Strict means, do what you can, not do somethings strict other not so strict and others ignore completely.

          Don’t call it strict if it isn’t strict

          • jeroenhd 3 hours ago
            The description in Firefox state:

            > Stronger protections that block more trackers, but may cause some sites to break.

            That seems very reasonable to me. Anyone who wants more than that can turn on resistFingerprinting and live with the consequences.

  • userbinator 20 hours ago
    "If they know you're spoofing, you're not spoofing hard enough."

    This stupid "war against bots" is going to lead to the downfall of the Internet and effectively turn it into another walled garden where only "approved" (anti-)user agents are allowed. Don't fall for the nonsense about "AI scrapers" --- it's just a way to manufacture consent.

    • 0x59 19 hours ago
      Idk, if bots ate hammering your server then setup rate limits. If you have content that you don't want others to have access to, don't serve it with a webserver.
      • TkTech 19 hours ago
        I used to just start giving any IP downloading way too much a redirect to multi-tb NASA images. This was a long time ago but it was surprisingly how many would follow redirects and never time out. Wouldn't see a request again for hours and then its right back to downloading a new part of the sky.

        Those images also used to crash all the early GUI irc and chat clients that showed inline images without size checks...

        • mcosta 17 hours ago
          How do you know it followed the redirect and downloaded the image?
        • dotancohen 19 hours ago
          How were you tracking each IP address's data usage? Did you parse the logs every request? Store usage in a database? At the application or webserver level?
          • TkTech 16 hours ago
            Webalayzer! I'm not sure there were really any other options at the time other than writing your own. Parsed the apache logs and gave you pretty detailed results and you could see the usage (in kb, which tells you how long ago this was!) broken down by date and IP.

            Once you added a redirect rule for the IP to apache you'd just check your log and see the IP that was hitting you every couple of minutes poofed for a good few hours.

            • dotancohen 9 hours ago
              Now that's a name I've not heard in a long time.

              That's nuts. I suppose you had Webalayzer on a minutely cron job. It might have been drawing more resources than Apache itself!

      • BenjiWiebe 1 hour ago
        I would LOVE to be able to use rate limits (well actually, since I'm dealing with fraud not scraping, I'd ban the IP).

        I can't, because every request comes from a new IP!!!

      • miki123211 5 hours ago
        There is something to be said for "one way indexes."

        Imagine you run a company register for a local government. You want to let people look up companies by their registration number (which they must disclose in all communications to you) to see if they're legit and whether any warnings have been raised against them. You don't want unscrupulous marketers to just be able to `SELECT * FROM companies WHERE type='nail_salon' AND city='london'`.

        If you aren't super strict about scraping, some shadowy business in Neverland, completely unconcerned with following your laws, will build that database.

        • bashkiddie 4 hours ago
          > Imagine you run a company register for a local government.

          Is this data not public for some reason? I think it will not hurt if there are multiple copies spread between public offices and private companies. What really hurts is a private company hammering your webserver for their own profit. They should get their own copy.

        • 0x59 3 hours ago
          If the purpose of the index is to allow people to lookup registration and warnings, probably just serve the list. This is public information and doesn't need to be gated. CSV header could be:

          Reg_no, status, no_warnings_last_12m

      • pmdr 18 hours ago
        This. What even is the point of blocking scapers if Google consumes your content anyway and serves it as an AI answer?

        These are sad times we're living as far as openness of the web goes. People would have less of a scraping problem if their websites didn't ship with 20MB of JS.

        • remus 18 hours ago
          > What even is the point of blocking scapers if Google consumes your content anyway and serves it as an AI answer?

          Google bot is generally fairly well behaved, but this is not the case for all scrapers and it can cause significant traffic (and expense).

      • MartijnHols 7 hours ago
        Rate limits don’t work if bots rotate IPs from residential blocks on every request.
    • matheusmoreira 15 hours ago
      Yeah. I can already see the future. Only computers that pass remote attestation will be able to connect to the internet at all.
  • konform 21 hours ago
    I'm maintaining a minority browser[0] and as of a couple of weeks this is affecting several of our users[1]. While I'm currently not considering this a browser bug (one could be involved, of course), more eyes are better and any help or ideas on improving or mitigating the situation would be appreciated.

    [0]: https://konform-browser.codeberg.page/

    [1]: Most? All? Without any telemetry, relying on user reports and our own testing here.

  • petterroea 12 hours ago
    "Your browser appears suspicious because it looks like you are trying to hide your identity"

    Another case of the much predicted downfall of freedom due to "people who hide themselves must have something to hide, so they are automatically suspicious"

    • jesterson 11 hours ago
      CF business model heavily relies on fearmongering, so what we can expect?

      They send these emails you know? "CF saved you XXX Gb of data and protected your from YYY attacks". I have few high load web sites which I turned CF on for a while. Knowing my traffic pretty well, I can say these "CF saved you XXX Gb of data and protected your from YYY attacks" is absolute bullshit with numbers greatly exaggerated.

      Since wwe can't catch them on this lie, they can put any number they like to make their "service" attrractive.

      • kevincox 5 hours ago
        I can only assume that every time I back out of these sites because I don't want to check the box or just don't want to wait a few seconds that is marketed to the site owner as a GREAT VICTORY as I am clearly a EVIL BOT that they have defended the site from.
  • Animats 22 hours ago
    Is there a deal between Google and Cloudflare to make non-Chrome browsers harder to use? The pressure to use Chrome keeps increasing, and the amount of ad filtering you can do in Chrome keeps decreasing.
    • jjice 1 hour ago
      I assume it's business people finding it to be a better "bang for their buck" implementation time-wise or lazy developers who don't use Firefox for their testing phase. I've seen it so many times. At a previous company, I was the only person using Firefox daily and I would catch bugs a few times a year during PRs for things that worked fine in Chrome, but not in Firefox. Oftentimes the suggestion was just to leave it because "who uses Firefox?"
    • wnevets 21 hours ago
      I would wager to guess its one of the nature consequences of Chrome being the most popular browser on the web. Most legit traffic will be from Chrome.
    • denismi 13 hours ago
      As someone who runs Firefox on both Linux and Android, with Enhanced Tracking Protection enabled, and tries to use web over native mobile apps wherever possible ... I really don't feel this at all?
    • hack1312 20 hours ago
      only chrome was approved for use internally at cf 5 years ago when i left
    • bigyabai 21 hours ago
    • tardedmeme 21 hours ago
      Yes
  • rfl890 20 hours ago
    >It looks like you're trying to hide your identity.

    You were never entitled to it in the first place

    • WatchDog 17 hours ago
      By the same token, you aren't entitled to see the website content.
      • rfl890 16 hours ago
        True, but that's at the discretion of the content author/publisher, not Cloudflare Turnstile.
        • LelouBil 12 hours ago
          It's the publisher that enabled Turnstile.
  • AgentReinAi 7 hours ago
    This is a concerning trend. Turnstile was marketed as a privacy-respecting CAPTCHA alternative, but requiring WebGL fingerprinting undermines that entirely. At this point what's the actual difference between this and the tracking they claimed to replace?
    • arbol 6 hours ago
      At the time, reCAPTCHA was the alternative and it was effectively working as a giant ad targeting data collection tool. I'm pretty sure Google have now back tracked from this.

      WebGL finger printing is just one of many things you need to do if you actually want to stop automation. There is no way round it other than requiring ID of some sort.

    • toastal 4 hours ago
      So wild thinking folks would actually believe a massive, US-based, publicly-traded company when they say something is “privacy-respecting”.
  • Kiboneu 22 hours ago
    In other words, Cloudflare requires you to substantially increase your browser’s attack surface in order to visit websites.
    • neop1x 2 hours ago
      It is very similar to kernel modules for game anti-cheats. Soon, websites will work on unmodified Windows and Mac computers only, with a signed cloudflare kernel driver installed. :/ They are completrly destroying the web.
    • NoMoreNicksLeft 12 hours ago
      You're not quite going far enough. Cloudflare requires that you allow it to attack your browser, as a sort of virtual hazing ritual, before you're allowed into the club. That this hazing makes your browser vulnerable to attacks by others too is a side effect that bothers them not at all.
      • Kiboneu 11 hours ago
        Ah yes, the TSA of the internet.
  • malka1986 1 day ago
    Thanks, i did not know about `privacy.resistfingerprinting`

    I'll make sure to fail all cloudflare turnshit in the future.

    • gruez 1 day ago
      I have it enabled and turnstile works fine.
      • jeroenhd 22 hours ago
        It breaks Turnstile for me on Android. Had to restart the browser for it to take effect of course.
  • dblohm7 23 hours ago
    > Plus privacy.resistfingerprinting isn't enabled even when selecting "Strict" "Enhanced Privacy Protection" in the settings, great job there Mozilla.

    That pref is there for the Tor Browser.

    • konform 22 hours ago
      It's enabled by default in Tor Browser and I'm not sure it can even be disabled?

      Also enabled by default for Konform Browser and Mullvad Browser, which borrow many of the privacy- and security-related patches from Tor Browser.

  • 1vuio0pswjnm7 14 hours ago
  • mring33621 1 hour ago
    Why does Cloudflare get to decide that it's wrong/bad to hide your identity?
  • ai_fry_ur_brain 11 hours ago
    Ive been concerned about Cloudflare turnstile fingerprinting ever since I started being forced to "prove I was human" on my anonymous X/Twitter accounts anytime I'd say something anti police/government/military.

    I would get locked out of the account on all devices after saying these things until I compeleted their turnstile. For many accounts I just never used them again.

    I could go more into this, but im highly suspicious of Cloudflare and of course X/Twitter in this regard. Ive been reccomend people to follow on anonymous twitter accounts for people I went to elementary school with and havent spoken to in years and have no digital connection to. Its very weird.

  • cdolan 1 hour ago
    The battle against the bots is becoming tiring. Stop trying to be a middleman broker of the entire Web, CF
  • gorgoiler 21 hours ago
    I always like the axiom with crime that once X% of the population are violating a statute then it should probably struck off. Recreational drugs being the obvious example.

    If randomized canvas stuff was cracked down upon as a bot thing but now everyone with a copy of Firefox is doing it, maybe Cloudflare should just “legalize” it?

    • aboardRat4 13 hours ago
      Everyone with a copy of Firefox is about 2% of the web.
  • fulafel 13 hours ago
    WebGL fingerprinting is of course an attack and a unintended use of the WebGL API. Browser vendors should respond to this misuse somehow (reputation based blacklist?).
    • account42 5 hours ago
      WebGL should just require a permission prompt, JS too really. No reason that every page you visits should be free to run stuff on your CPU and GPU.
  • 4oo4 1 day ago
    I tested this extension that I've been using for a long time on the turnstile page and it got through, fwiw. I think it's a bit more subtle than how resistfingerprinting works but not sure what the privacy tradeoff is.

    https://github.com/kkapsner/CanvasBlocker

    • tosti 22 hours ago
      Looks cool. And I wonder why I'd run this over JSshelter. It appears to do the same thing, no?
      • 4oo4 17 hours ago
        JSshelter looks cool, I'm not familiar but this makes it seem like it operates more like resistfingerprinting by blocking outright instead of noise injection, at the expense of more broken sites?

        https://jshelter.org/fpd/

        What all security extensions do you run? After running into issues over the years, with extensions doing multiple things that fight each other, I switched to trying to block via ublock origin as much as possible, then prefer other extensions to just do one thing to extend coverage, like this one. Makes it much easier to troubleshoot/exclude/disable when it breaks something vs. fiddling in settings.

    • BoingBoomTschak 22 hours ago
      Thanks for the report, I've been running this for a long time.
  • adamtaylor_13 1 day ago
    So if you need to prevent bot abuse, but also don't want an ugly captcha every time someone goes to sign up, is there a better option?
    • ribtoks 1 day ago
      Use proof-of-work captchas, many are private by default. Look into Private Captcha or Cap captcha.
      • mootothemax 22 hours ago
        Speaking from the scraper’s perspective, I like proof of work; a ten year old 96-core server will cost a couple of quid to run for a few hours and will grab an absurd number of pages thanks to the access granted by repeatedly solving proofs of work. Small slick codebases too!
        • tardedmeme 21 hours ago
          There's also the Anubis idea where your PoW is persistent until your IP address or session cookie changes, so you get to skip PoW in exchange for making yourself identifiable, which means the PoW can then be ramped up to take a couple of minutes.

          I don't use Anubis though. I just make my site not take five seconds to render a page so bots can overload it easily? It's not actually that hard?

        • Velocifyer 18 hours ago
          It would be more profitable to mine bitcoin.
      • arbol 20 hours ago
        PoW doesn't stop bots.. It's an annoyance at most. A rate limiter and nothing more
        • 0123456789ABCDE 19 hours ago
          PoW difficulty can be scaled, eg: all cookies must work 1s, but 2nd cookie from the same ip, might have to do 2s of work

          ideally one would pick something a bit more forgiving than a linear function, to avoid penalizing too much users connecting from CGNAT

          • arbol 6 hours ago
            I think we're talking about 2 different things. PoW is annoying for basic scrapers but it really doesn't affect enterprise grade bot operations with access to unlimited residential proxies.
      • matheusmoreira 14 hours ago
        Can this be repurposed as some kind of distributed cryptocurrency mining mechanism? Pay websites by mining some monero in order to access them?
      • phoronixrly 1 day ago
        How does proof of work stop bots?
        • stephantul 1 day ago
          Because it destroys the economics of scraping. It’s too expensive with proof of work, or at least not as economically viable
          • gruez 1 day ago
            Depends on what type of scraping you're trying to stop. For the dumb scrapers that would try to scrape every page on a git forge (for which there are a bazillion pages for a modest project, because of how the site works), yeah it might deter them enough to stop. For anything high value (eg. reddit comments or retail prices), 10s of cpu time isn't going to stop them.
            • pmontra 1 day ago
              It will not scare away bots but 10 seconds of wait (CPU or only a sleep) will turn away many real users. "This site is so slow, I'll use something else." A kind of reverse captcha.
              • Hnrobert42 23 hours ago
                Maybe, the proof of work can run in the background.
                • btown 22 hours ago
                  Or it can run as part of a checkout wizard's "verifying your browser and processing your payment, don't close your tab" step.
                  • mattstir 12 hours ago
                    At which point it exists solely to punish real human users? What scraper bot is going through checkout?
            • stephantul 22 hours ago
              Sure, the whole premise is exactly that proof of work reduces the value of scraping, while having negligible impact on users. If the data is so valuable that bot operators are willing to pay 10s of cpu, then other measures are necessary.

              Nevertheless even for these high value cases, you can still argue that it disincentivizes the business model, it becomes less efficient.

            • thayne 22 hours ago
              If it's high value, there isn't really much you can do that will be completely effective. Traditional captchas can often be beaten by AI, or by "captcha farms" where impoverished people are paid pennies to complete captchas. Fingerprinting can be beaten by using a full browser to make the requests. Basically anything you do is just a matter of making it more expensive for bots to access it.
              • arbol 20 hours ago
                Beating fingerprinting and beating traditional captcha is far more expensive than solving pow. Pow doesn't stop anyone, not even the most novice bot operators
            • tobyhinloopen 10 hours ago
              You can just download all of Reddit from torrent sites
          • ranger_danger 16 hours ago
            5W load for 2 seconds is 0.002Wh, I think we'll be fine
          • arbol 20 hours ago
            Except it doesn't
        • ray_v 1 day ago
          If it gets too expensive/time-consuming to scrape then it won't happen at scale (as much)?
    • keynha 21 hours ago
      Behavioral signals are the usual answer: risk-scored, invisible challenges; proof-of-work (cost without identity, though it taxes mobile); and signup-velocity/rate limits that stop cheap abuse before any challenge fires. The reason fingerprinting wins anyway is that it requires less operator effort, not that it is the only thing that works.
      • arbol 20 hours ago
        Behavioural requires interaction. Fingerprinting is instantaneous and cloudflare runs on page load for lots of sites
    • ImPostingOnHN 1 day ago
      The tool "Anubis" uses proof of work instead
      • BetterThanSober 1 day ago
        With a tuned cool down period this isn't a problem, especially if you frequent the sites. OpenWRT uses Anubis and usually when I need to peruse their site I'm on a very low-end device. I prefer waiting much more over finding Waldos

        But in principle I agree that there's no good answer to this, scraping _is_ useful and I bet most of us here had scraped something, it is AI company and their use of human's material for training without consent and return that led us to this (I know botting exists in forum since forum is a thing but it is easily solved by human moderators and keyword filter)

      • timpera 1 day ago
        Anubis often takes more than 60 seconds to complete on low-end devices (especially old smartphones). It seems like there's no good solution.
        • toastal 4 hours ago
          It also requires JavaScript. I like to have JS off by default since running code on my machine is a privilege—one that I opt into, not the the site owner’s choice. This is frustrating since these blockers don’t let me know if the site is trustworthy first before needing to solve a Sudoku for Cloudflare or calculating useless hashes for Anubis.
        • QuantumNomad_ 23 hours ago
          But after you’ve completed the Anubis PoW challenge for a site, it remains valid for some amount of time.

          So it’s not quite as horrible as it sounds.

          I have setting up Anubis for my own sites on my todo list. And I wish more people did it too. I don’t really mind waiting a little bit extra every now and then before the page loads. What I do mind is ReCaptcha asking me to click all the pictures with buses in them etc. And especially when I have to do it several times over before it’s happy. I’d rather wait a minute for a page to load than to ever solve a ReCaptcha again, if given the choice.

          • mattstir 12 hours ago
            > So it’s not quite as horrible as it sounds.

            I don't know about you, but if a random webpage takes 60+ seconds to load, I just close it and choose to never interact with that site again (unless it's my bank, which is a real and annoying occurrence).

        • dangus 1 day ago
          That must be really low end then. I’ve never seen it complete in a timeframe that was slower than “I can’t even read the page before it redirects”
          • titularcomment 22 hours ago
            My guess is its an implementation error, not an hardware limitation. I have two 10-year-old devices and one passes instantaneously while the other halts for a good half minute every time.
        • ImPostingOnHN 1 day ago
          There's not an easy, perfect solution, for sure. Newer phones get faster, but spammer compute gets cheaper.

          Some sort of decentralized trust web seems like another option, though less viable.

          • WesolyKubeczek 1 day ago
            One of unexpected outcomes from AI-induced hardware shortage may be that, in fact, compute won’t be getting cheaper and may in fact get more expensive…
      • phoronixrly 1 day ago
        How does Anubis stop bots?
        • redwall_hp 22 hours ago
          Anubis is designed to stop a certain class of badly behaved bots. It intentionally doesn't run if a bot identifies itself with a UA, such as Googlebot, because then you can rate limit it or block by UA and with other tools.

          Anubis is active when a user agent looks like a web browser (e.g. contains the "Mozilla" substring every major browser uses). The reverse proxy serves an interstitial page that does a proof-of-work check, validated server side, setting a cookie if it passes.

          This means a legitimate user won't constantly get the proof of work check, because they already passed it. But AI bots rotating through tons of residential IPs to scrape your forum or git forge or whatever will be slowed down.

          Overall, I like the idea. It's unobtrusive, privacy preserving, and seems to be working out well for a lot of sites.

        • basilikum 22 hours ago
          The real answer is that it makes sites behave different requiring the bots to make slight adjustments.

          And there are just not enough sites using Anubis for the people and companies running the bots to care to do that.

          If you do care bypassing Anubis is trivial.

        • arbol 20 hours ago
          It doesn't. It slows them down. To stop bots you need to employ the full suite of tools, fingerprinting, IP rep, behavioural analysis. Anubis will slow down your basic scrapers that try to crawl the entire web but it is useless against actual bots
        • xena 1 day ago
          Bots don't execute JavaScript or follow complicated redirects.
          • account42 5 hours ago
            This level of (mis)undertanding perfectly explains that crapware.
          • ExpertAdvisor01 21 hours ago
            That's not true . A lot of bots are just headless chrome instances .
          • pwg 23 hours ago
            Bots don't [currently] execute JavaScript or follow complicated redirects.

            They don't now, but enough "high value to the bots" pages turning on JS or complicated redirects will simply result in the bot authors adding JS execution or redirect following so they can continue "botting" the sites they want to scrape.

            It's a hole with no bottom. Each one-up on the anti-bot side will eventually be handled on the bot side.

          • ranger_danger 16 hours ago
            They have been doing it for years: https://roundproxies.com/blog/bypass-bot-detection/
  • avallach 1 day ago
    Doesn't this mean we just need to make the webgl fingerprint resistance implementation smarter? Instead of explicitly rejecting webgl access or responding with dummy data, respond with data that is random within space of N common and reproducible patterns. E.g. emulate webgl implementation of some low spec but actually popular devices.
    • btown 22 hours ago
      The last screenshot in the OP article mentions that "a browser extension... adding random noise to canvas data" can be detected. Which isn't to say this perfectly detects all such randomization, but it's certainly an active part of the arms race.
      • ranger_danger 16 hours ago
        Yes but the idea is that the protection should be part of the browser itself, then it becomes the expected norm AND isn't really "detectable" since there's no extension to redefine javascript variables. Scraper-friendly solutions like Camoufox or CloakBrowser make such changes to avoid having the same fingerprint every time while still appearing normal.
    • bflesch 1 day ago
      All of those advanced features should be enabled on a per-website basis but unfortunately even browsers whose marketing focuses on privacy don't allow you to do that. Same with TLS root CA certificates, there is no way to configure that a certain CA can only create certificates for certain domains.
  • baq 20 hours ago
    The logical next step would be for them to allow to pay you to pass the check and become the ultimate Internet tool booth.
  • nulledy 1 day ago
    As turnstile users on several of our sites, I think we need to revisit that decision.
    • sammy2255 1 day ago
      Out of curiosity, why did you have it on in the first place?
      • nulledy 23 hours ago
        Bot rejection for contact forms. Better UX than reCaptcha.
        • nlitened 20 hours ago
          Did you think it rejects bots by using some kind of magic?
          • nulledy 17 hours ago
            Well, of course not, don't be silly. But if it blocks visitors of our site from using non-standard browsers, perhaps its worth exploring alternatives.

            Nearly all of our sites are visiting by extremely tech literate folks, the exact type that may not be using Google Chrome or Firefox.

  • JensenTorp 12 hours ago
    I want to point out that Cloudflare Turnstyle is a separate and more strict product than their usual "are you a bot" protection.

    I use Cloudflare protection on all my website but only the account creation page uses Turnstyle.

  • meszmate 5 hours ago
    I don't really understand why verifying I'm human would require fingerprinting my device in the first place. The whole framing feels backwards.
  • DR_MING 9 hours ago
    It feels like we're moving toward a web where proving you're a human becomes a larger part of the browsing experience.
    • account42 5 hours ago
      You mean proving that you are using an approved browser. The "proving you're a human" part is already owellian doublespeak.
  • jameson 20 hours ago
    I use LibreWolf which disables creating WebGL API by default and I don't have this issue. Why could be the reasons I'm passing CF turnstile?
  • mixologic 20 hours ago
    Privacy and Bot defense are opposite ends of the same fulcrum. If you permit privacy, the site/service has to trust users to behave and follow the rules. If you track users, then the users have to trust the site/service owners not to abuse that trust. There isn't really an in between.

    So if you want privacy, you have to accept poor and sometimes insecure services.

  • kordlessagain 1 day ago
    I did warmups in Grub Crawler to fight this: https://deepbluedynamics.com/grub
  • JoshTriplett 1 day ago
    "This makes your browser appear suspicious because it looks like you're trying to hide your identity."

    Yeah, this needs to be burned to the ground.

    • gruez 1 day ago
      Bad optics aside, it doesn't actually reflect reality. See my other comment. You can enable basically all the privacy settings and still pass turnstile. Tor browser in a VM passes it, of all things.

      https://litter.catbox.moe/gaizpk692bhhs6b7.png

      • JoshTriplett 23 hours ago
        Any idea what the difference is between your setup and the one in the article that failed with fingerprint-resistance enabled?
        • gruez 23 hours ago
          He's using a custom browser, apparently: https://hacktivis.me/projects/badwolf
          • JoshTriplett 23 hours ago
            I'm talking about the screenshot from Firefox.
            • gruez 23 hours ago
              It didn't fail for him in firefox, even with privacy settings enabled.
              • JoshTriplett 22 hours ago
                It tripped "Canvas Randomization Detected". See the last screenshot.

                Cloudflare's demo page still treats that as a pass, but complains about it. As is often the case with Cloudflare, I expect that they'll then take no responsibility for sites that use more aggressive settings.

  • flintenmuschi 1 hour ago
    There are people working for this business, frequenting this very site. Fuck you and your business.
  • whatwhyisthis 16 hours ago
    You hiding things from them automatically lots automatically bins you with agents having a reason to hide things from them.

    Which, to be clear, is the entire problem: given how much of the internet goes through them, they should have enough alternative signals as to wether you’re not a bad actor that are stronger than this specific one.

    However, this also presents the problem that there’s barely any users in their base with your exact configuration, so getting any actual solutions might just take forever.

  • X-Istence 17 hours ago
    This is an issue I am running up against on Safari (Version 26.5 (21624.2.5.11.4)) on MacOS 26.5.

    I keep getting the turnstile and having to click the "I a human" button.

  • Wowfunhappy 1 day ago
    ...in the age of AI, does anyone have an actual solution for keeping out bots while preserving the privacy of humans?

    Obviously this is terrible, but I think there's a possibility it's the least terrible option? Another option is IP reputation, which I think is worse. Or scanning a code with a non-rooted phone, which I think is even worse than that!

    • fidotron 1 day ago
      > ...in the age of AI, does anyone have an actual solution for keeping out bots while preserving the privacy of humans?

      There isn't one, and pretending otherwise is nonsense because humans will always provide their credentials to something to act on their behalf.

      In the limit you end up with Chinese phone farms.

      • tardedmeme 1 day ago
        Right. Botnet operators love cloudflare because they make so much money renting out compromised machines to pass their tests.
    • thisislife2 1 day ago
      The only solution is regulation. If all content created by anyone has a copyright, how does an implicit opt-in (which is what happens if you don't create a robots.txt file for your website) for scraping make any sense? Moreover, even if you have a robots.txt, AI (or whatever) bots often don't respect it (or use workarounds - they outsource scraping of such "restricted" sites to unethical third-parties to get the data; Meta has even resorted to piracy, openly!). So clearly, the logic and the "honour system" has failed.

      Cloudflare, Google Captcha, HCaptcha etc. are all shitty technical solutions because, as we are all discovering, it comes at the cost of our privacy (i.e. our personal data may monetise these services) and / or our computing resource and time. If current copyright laws aren't sufficient to prevent this, we have to acknowledge the system is broken. The answer could be enhancing it with some kind of Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA) -like laws, but in favour of the creators against BigTech or rogue actors.

      - Web-scraping and copyright law - https://www.neudata.co/blog/web-scraping-and-copyright-law

      - Why DMCA Claims Against Web Scrapers Face Long Odds - https://capstonedc.com/insights/why-dmca-claims-against-web-...

      • oceanplexian 1 day ago
        Or you could let information be free, at least the stuff that’s on the public net.

        As for issues like bots overloading websites or using too many resources scaling laws will take care of it quickly, it’s not like you can’t serve thousands of RPS from a Raspberry Pi these days.

      • arbol 19 hours ago
        Or the regulated agents standard that cloudflare is conveniently going to steward alongside Google...
      • 0x59 19 hours ago
        I mean, you could just turn on WebGL or use an approved, secure, agent to access the web. If you have nothing to hide, then you have nothing to fear.
      • ImPostingOnHN 1 day ago
        I don't think regulation will stop web scraping, not least of which because it can be done from locations outside the jurisdiction of the regulations.

        > we have to acknowledge the system is broken

        The system is broken. It probably takes, what, 10 seconds or less to use a residential or foreign proxy, 6+ months to internationally track and prosecute a single offender? So like a million times more effort going the regulatory route.

        • thisislife2 1 day ago
          Just as criminal laws don't end all crimes, copyright laws and anti-scraping regulation won't end all scraping. But it will greatly reduce it and limit it to rogue actors. Two examples I can cite here are the laws against email spams and laws against unsolicited marketing calls - they had a definite impact in reducing both (even in India, from where I am, where implementation of laws are often lax).
          • Wowfunhappy 14 hours ago
            I basically agree that the idea should be to reduce, not eliminate, bots.

            However, a big difference with crimes involving the internet is that they can be launched from anywhere. In the real world, I can't steal from someone unless I'm physically present in the same country as my victim. On the internet, the US could outlaw scraping and Russia would keep doing it.

            • account42 4 hours ago
              We already have ways to deal with badly behaving countries.
          • JoshTriplett 1 day ago
            Exactly. Bot activity is a problem of volume, not all-or-nothing. Solving 95% of it would be a win.
      • mschuster91 20 hours ago
        > The only solution is regulation.

        The thing why Cloudflare got invented isn't AI scrapers. These are just the latest development... the original reason why Cloudflare got created and why it experienced such a meteoric growth is DDoS and botnets.

        Yes. We need regulation in the AI space. But it will be useless as long as bad actors aren't held accountable - and a lot of the bad actors aren't in our jurisdictions. You got hacked devices all over the world in giant botnets, controlled by Russia, Chinese, Iranian and North Korean actors. You got Chinese AI scraper bots as China is heavily investing into training their own models. You got Indian, Filipino and Myanmar-based scammers.

        And frankly I have no idea how to get all of that under control. As much as I'd like to see sanctions against both domestic and foreign enablers of abuse (which includes residential ISPs) - it's going to be one giant ass whack-a-mole game.

    • onel 6 hours ago
      Unfortunately, I think the solution will be invite only services, communities, etc. Someone needs to invite you to have access to it. If you host your own blog then that might be okay to have public access, you would want everyone and everything to read it. But if you're hosting your own photos, we might need tailscale like services to only allow certain people to access that.
    • neop1x 1 hour ago
      Just implement caches, add indices to your DBs, use CDNs. Servers are very fast nowadays, have quite a lot of RAM and can handle huge amount of clients. No need to implement this anti-bot bullshit, it is mainly marketing, providing solutions to a problem which doesn't exist for most websites.
    • cr125rider 1 day ago
      And identifying a bot that is acting on my behalf. Claude go search this topic is basically the same as Googling something and clicking on the results. Human driven AI searching needs to be in a different box than AI scraping for training data.

      Which sounds extremely difficult to differentiate

      • JoshTriplett 1 day ago
        Hopefully it stays that way; "a bot acting on my behalf" is still a bot. At least it's often a well-behaved bot and uses a user-agent that can be detected and blocked.
    • ravenstine 22 hours ago
      Or maybe we can actually start paying for all the things we use on the Web, making it prohibitively expensive to deploy fleets of bots.
    • spacedoutman 1 day ago
      Private invite only internets
      • arbol 19 hours ago
        LAN parties?!
    • Gander5739 1 day ago
      You don't need a non-rooted phone to pass captcha checks, I have a rooted phone and can pass the captchas that ask you to scan a qr code. But I doubt phones without google services would manage.
    • jeroenhd 22 hours ago
      Remote attestation should still be possible with a rooted phone if phone manufacturers weren't so shit. If the attestation happens at hardware level, it doesn't matter what programs or kernels you're running.
    • csomar 1 day ago
      They are not a problem unless you "believe" it is a problem. I estimate around 20-25K hits to my website from bots per day and I have all cloudflare protections disabled. Any decently optimized server should be able to easily handle that. (it's roughly 1 request every 3 seconds).
      • specialp 1 day ago
        Yes and that is just the bot background radiation of the internet. I run a primary source of information site and these botnets are aggressive to a DDOS level. All to do some sort of scraping. Because they have sophisticated enough tactics to DDOS us if they wanted to. However I am not sure their objective as they have wasted enough of our resources to have scraped all our content 1000s of times over. That 25k traffic is a couple of minutes for us. And that adds up. 80-90pct of our traffic is this
      • HWR_14 22 hours ago
        Assuming that the bots aren't repackaging your content and preventing users from seeing your blog by serving that content to them first.
      • thisislife2 1 day ago
        True. But it still wastes your server resources, right? And it's sad that you have to accept that as part of the "cost" of hosting a site ...
        • ndriscoll 1 day ago
          What resources are you concerned about? An n100 minipc should be capable of serving something like a blog at 20k+ requests/second (or saturating its network).
          • thisislife2 9 hours ago
            Sure. But 25,000 (bot hits / day) x 50kB (static webpage) = 1.25 GB / day / page x 30 (days) = 37.5 GB of data transfer / month / page. And that's assuming a static resource - if any of the resource is dynamically generated by the server, there's a CPU and memory cost too. Overall, even if you treat the impact on the server as "negligible", it's still an unnecessary waste of resource was the point I was trying to convey.

            Here's a more real-world projection of the cost and server impact - The Bandwidth Cost of AI Crawlers: What Scraping Really Costs Publishers - https://aipaypercrawl.com/articles/ai-crawler-bandwidth-cost

    • doctorpangloss 1 day ago
      web environment integrity
      • Wowfunhappy 16 hours ago
        But that is so clearly worse than WebGL fingerprinting!
    • malka1986 1 day ago
      > keeping out bot

      You can forget about it. It is not possible. Simple as that.

      • Wowfunhappy 1 day ago
        Let's say I'm selling concert tickets. How do I prevent bots from buying up all the tickets and scalping them?
        • ranguna 23 hours ago
          Do it like plane tickets do, tie a ticket to an identity + buyback up to a week or so before the concert in case someone wants to cancel (or authorize the transfer and capture only a week before). Ask for ID and ticket at the entrance.
        • arbol 19 hours ago
          - behavioural fingerprinting - ja4 - IP rep - queue mechanism - card country to IP country checks - app attestation - custom metrics based on knowledge of past scalpers

          It's hard but it's not impossible. You can make it very inconvenient for scalpers. They need to poll at volume so their behaviour is very much detectable. A hard stance is required on IP rep, especially for more in demand concerts.

          • Wowfunhappy 17 hours ago
            I don't now, a lot of this seems just as invasive as WebGL fingerprinting, if not more invasive.
            • arbol 8 hours ago
              It's either that or you tie tickets to government ID like in France. If the arbitrage opportunity is more than the cost of automation then someone will exploit it.
        • MyMemoryfails 1 day ago
          I'd simply check filling speed, even with browser's autocomplete humans are slow due needing click submit.

          Then when it's "processing", do them in bulk and prioritize slower users. There's huge opportunity do bot checks after checkout without affecting user experience.

          Also on product launches you could add unique field which requires user to input, for example that way bots can't prepare for launches.

          • arbol 19 hours ago
            Yeah, this doesn't even begin to cut it
          • fragmede 1 day ago
            huh. no wonder my password manager's auto submit triggers bot detection (it's a fairly popular one).
        • ndriscoll 1 day ago
          Sell them via a Dutch auction. Eliminate the arbitrage opportunity for scalpers and make more money in the process.
          • dcrazy 22 hours ago
            That’s how you wind up with only kids of millionaires at your Taylor Swift concert.
        • luckylion 1 day ago
          Tie them to the buyer's identity, offer at-value buy-backs until X weeks before event, disallow resale.
    • ashishbijlani15 22 hours ago
      [dead]
  • m463 11 hours ago
    cloudflare is becoming more and more of a gatekeeper of the public internet.
  • morpheuskafka 19 hours ago
    I'm getting this error on Safari 26.3.1 even without an adblocker extension, and advanced tracking prevention is set to private tabs online.
  • rg2004 11 hours ago
    Question, can we spoof a fingerprint to be random and valid each time?
  • Dwedit 23 hours ago
    Adding noise to a canvas element is a mistake anyway. It means you can't develop a proper paint program using web technologies because your browser will mess with the image.
  • elivoncoder 14 hours ago
    interesting topic. 3 of my browsers failed that test page. konqueror. and on android, vanadium and cromite.

    https://browser-compat.turnstile.workers.dev/

  • gspr 3 hours ago
    This makes me think we need something like https://www.ietf.org/archive/id/draft-venhoek-tls-client-puz... sooner rather than later. It seems pretty absurd that everyone is running around with bespoke application layer solutions for this.
  • gausswho 18 hours ago
    Brazenly requiring the abuse of a browser feature's intended use against the user. What an age.

    I'd like to hear from someone who worked on WebGL and how they feel about their ambitions being utterly subverted. Remember when the dream was playing games i. the browser?

  • boesboes 9 hours ago
    Cloudflare is just a fucking protection racket. Next we'll need to pay to use services too
  • megous 22 hours ago
    They use all kinds of obscure APIs, which you'll learn if you're privacy/security conscious and disable random web APIs that are of no use to YOU as a web user, but only can ever serve the people who serve you stuff or want to hack you or track you.

    Normally websites feature test and just skip using obscure disabled APIs, or more likely, websites don't use those APIs at all or only tracking scripts use it, which are already optional usually.

    Problem with CF is that if you want increased security they'll prevent you from gaining it everywhere, even on sites they don't protect, or prevent you from accessing services even the ones you paid for. Browsers don't allow disabling APIs per domain, so you're either at risk everywhere or you're blocked from accessing a lot of things for no particular reason.

    CF can't be bothered to feature test.

    • arbol 19 hours ago
      I'm no CF advocate but those random APIs are literally what differentiates people running Chrome on their computer versus a bot operation with a load of containers. Kubertnetes clusters don't have GPUs. This is why it's used in bot detection (I use brave with no hardware acceleration and I'm captcha everywhere)
  • aussieguy1234 14 hours ago
    For the malicious bot authors, if WebGL is a "free pass" so that their browser is not detected as a bot, they'll simply switch to a chrome based browser such as CloakBrowser, which already passes CloudFlare Turnstile.

    So no real benefit for bot detection here. Just a privacy nightmare for everyone else.

  • zuzululu 22 hours ago
    Dont like it but is a reality due to bots
  • SilverElfin 22 hours ago
    This company makes the internet unusable if you value privacy and use VPNs or whatever. Evil.
    • pmdr 18 hours ago
      Can't directly outlaw VPNs? No problem, we'll have the the few corporations powering the internet block anyone who even thinks about anonymity!
  • bflesch 1 day ago
    Firefox has so much built-in tracking it seems they want to push me to build my own browser. For example every time you open the settings there are several ways they are sending out pings to certain extensions.

    Also by default addons.mozilla.org is a privileged site so of course they include google tracking in it and they get the proper fingerprint no matter what you have configured.

    • konform 22 hours ago
      If you are this motivated (I am!), how about joining forces on Konform Browser? Radio silence and remote third-party integrations disabled by default and generally sane and conservative defaults respecting old-fashioned notions like individual consent and data-protection regulations.

      Aside from general dev, could use a hand in bringing it to more platforms (mobile and flatpak are frequently asked) and taking a closer look at fingerprinting protections and what's currently tripping up the turnstile.

      https://codeberg.org/konform-browser/source

  • anonym29 1 day ago
    Say no to malware - say no to Cloudflare
    • corstian 4 hours ago
      For real -- that stuff is obfuscated in a way most malware could learn from.
  • boywitharupee 21 hours ago
    > has been looping indefinitely

    this can mean WebContent process is crashing

  • J37T3R 19 hours ago
    Web3.0 and beyond was a mistake
  • kykat 1 day ago
    What? Big tech company is evil? No way! I thought cloudflare were good guys...
    • aleksandrm 1 day ago
      What gave you the impression that Cloudflare were the good guys?
      • tardedmeme 1 day ago
        Probably everyone on HN singing their praises for the past 10 years.
        • tick_tock_tick 20 hours ago
          Pretty sure every thread has a massive chain about them being a NSA honey pot.
        • kykat 1 day ago
          And my og comment getting downvoted on this very intellectual forum that definitely isn't an echo chamber
          • Petersipoi 1 day ago
            Your very sarcastic, uninteresting comment getting downvoted is not an indication that forum isn't intellectual. It's an indication that you aren't behaving intellectually.
          • bflesch 1 day ago
            Cognitive dissonance in tech millionaires is quite strong, still worth it to trigger them from time to time on a factual basis.
    • aboardRat4 1 day ago
      Big tech companies are always visited first by the G-men who need something done.
  • shevy-java 1 day ago
    I wondered about that too. So they allege that bots require that everyone now has to ID to the big service providers. Very dystopian situation. Skynet is currently winning the war.
  • Fokamul 1 day ago
    Please, anyone from EU (US is doomed rofl) create a petition to ban browser-fingerprinting in EU, across all existing browsers.

    I'm not good at creating petitions but can happily sign it. Also with stop killing games and anti-chat control.

    I can imagine this can get a traction, if it's explained in youtube video to "normal" people.

    • fidotron 1 day ago
      A better solution would be to make webgl, webgpu and (especially) webrtc have some sort of prompt before they can be in any way used in that fashion, but this will absolutely destroy web ux Windows Vista style.
      • JoshTriplett 1 day ago
        And then the gatekeepers like Cloudflare will say "please hit accept in order to verify your browser and access this site".
      • richwater 1 day ago
        You mean the "Accept Cookies" banner that has become a complete joke? Pass
        • MyMemoryfails 1 day ago
          I think he means browser permissions, for example when browsers want notify or record your mic theres a permission check something similar for webgl.
          • J-Kuhn 1 day ago
            Fun Fact: When Cookies were introduced into Netscape, you got a browser permission prompt. Then browser vendors set it to allow by default.

            And then legislation required those consent boxes back, so everyone built their own, instead of demanding that the default should be changed back.

        • bflesch 1 day ago
          It's about explicitly deciding to allow certain capabilities on a per-website basis. No major browser allows defense-in-depth via fine-grained website permissions.

          Even simply changing the user agent was sabotaged at Firefox, and choosing one user agent per domain is wishful thinking.

        • fsflover 22 hours ago
          This is actually illegal under GDPR.
    • arbol 19 hours ago
      You literally can't get rid of it without introducing government issued ID to buy any scarce freely accessible items
      • raincole 19 hours ago
        Which is why it's very likely to happen, especially in the EU.
    • jeroenhd 22 hours ago
      Fingerprinting is just an implementation, banning it will just drive these companies to invent new tricks. That's why the GDPR doesn't specify any technical tracking methods, whether you're using cookies or fingerprinting or a camera drone looking at the user's screen, tracking without consent or good reason is banned.

      I doubt politicians care much about fingerprinting, though. They're more afraid of actual businesses getting attacked by bots than they are about Linux users with weird setups not being able to access some websites.

    • koolala 1 day ago
      a. Accept All

      b. Accept Only Necessary Fingerprinting

  • hanzeweiasa 13 hours ago
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  • gruez 1 day ago
    This blog post is filled with false assumptions.

    >Turns out it's because Cloudflare wants to have a fingerprint of your device via WebGL, the only reason for doing this would be tracking.

    > So Cloudflare just banned all WebKitGTK browsers as I guess they put an exception for Safari.

    This is false. I ran firefox with:

    * hardware acceleration disabled (so software renderer, nothing to fingerprint)

    * resistfingerprinting enabled, including letterboxing with default window size

    * webgl disabled

    * VPN enabled

    * In a Windows VM

    By all accounts this should be the most suspicious fingerprint ever, but turnstile happily lets me through. If they want to track people, they're doing a pretty bad job. My guess is that OP's browser is getting banned because his WebKitGTK has a weird fingerprint, not because of webgl or whatever.

    > Such things are blocked in WebKit, and have been for years. Meaning it's tracking so awful that even Apple would block it, and as far as I can tell it's not the kind of privacy protection you can easily disable in it.

    This is also false. Webgl fingerprinting works just fine on Safari. They might try to mitigate it by adding some noise, but that's not so different than what firefox does, and is certainly not "blocked".

    • konform 22 hours ago
      I think your comment is also making plenty assumptions..

      Official Firefox can be leaky unless you build it yourself with some build-time changes or use a fork with such[0]. Am I guessing right that you still have Webcompat, RemoteSettings, and Nimbus enabled still? How do you know a compatibility intervention isn't causing your browser to open the kimono just enough to "unbreak the page"?

      > My guess is that OP's browser is getting banned because his WebKitGTK has a weird fingerprint, not because of webgl or whatever.

      My guess is a different flavor of the same: Not matching an expected fingerprint (simplified: whitelist vs blacklist approach) combined with other factors.

      [0]: I'm currently aware of Tor Browser, Konform Browser (am dev), Mullvad Browser, and to a certain extent Waterfox, LibreWolf, and r3df0x doing that.

      • gruez 21 hours ago
        >Official Firefox can be leaky unless you build it yourself with some build-time changes or use a fork with such[0]. Am I guessing right that you still have Webcompat, RemoteSettings, and Nimbus enabled still? How do you know a compatibility intervention isn't causing your browser to open the kimono just enough to "unbreak the page"?

        See my other comment, tor browser works fine too: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=48346659

    • jeroenhd 22 hours ago
      Enabling resistfingerprinting on my Android phone shows me the same error screen. It's not just webkit.

      fingerprintingProtection works fine on the other hand, but then again that's intentionally less intrusive.

    • shiomiru 1 day ago
      > My guess is that OP's browser is getting banned because his WebKitGTK has a weird fingerprint, not because of webgl or whatever.

      So why is Cloudflare saying the author got blocked because of WebGL?

      > > Such things are blocked in WebKit, and have been for years. Meaning it's tracking so awful that even Apple would block it, and as far as I can tell it's not the kind of privacy protection you can easily disable in it.

      > This is also false. Webgl fingerprinting works just fine on Safari. They might try to mitigate it by adding some noise, but that's not so different than what firefox does, and is certainly not "blocked".

      While I don't have an iDevice to try, the assumption that they are special cased is fair... because they are: https://blog.cloudflare.com/eliminating-captchas-on-iphones-...

      (Yes, this is basically WEI in a shinier package.)

    • superkuh 1 day ago
      Yep. Cloudflare and cloudflare's customers don't care about blocking people that use non-standard browsers (or accessible browsers, or feed readers, or whatever). Using cloudflare defaults is basically saying, "Only major corporate browsers released in the last year or two can access this site."