- From: Christine Runnegar <runnegar@isoc.org>
- Date: Tue, 15 Jan 2019 17:42:26 +0000
- To: "public-privacy@w3.org" <public-privacy@w3.org>
For those who will be joining the ad hoc call today, please make sure you have read Pete’s outline draft (below). Christine ------- # Private Browsing Mode ## "Private Browsing" and Web Browsers All popular web browsers include some mode or method for the user to indicate that they want "additional" privacy, beyond what a typical browsing experience would provide. In some cases, the meer use of a particular browse (e.g. Tor Browser Bundle) may indicate a user preference for heightened privacy. Browser vendors implement different protections, target different threat models, and generally forward different aims in their implementations of a "private browsing" mode. This document does not aim to prescribe any particular behavior that browser vendors should follow when in a "private browsing" mode. This document only aims to recognize and stand in for an expressed desire for more privacy by the user, beyond whats provided by typical browsing. Standards authors can then use this signal to suggest or instruct different behaviors browser functionality, when users have signaled this additional privacy desire. ## Aim of this Document This document aims to solve several related problems. ### Supporting Privacy in Standards First, web users desire a web with different privacy / functionality trade offs when performing different browsing actions. It may be desirable for standards to describe functionality when the user has requested heightened privacy. Examples of this include different resolutions in geolocation, different resolutions in timing information, different cookie and storage policies, etc. There is currently, no way for standard documents to describe additional-privacy, but still in-standard, functionality, beyond ad-hoc methods. This document hopes to give standards authors a commonly understood signal to key off. ### Supporting Web-Compatibility Second, the lack of a "standards-compliant, privacy-focused" definition creates web compatibility difficulties for web authors. Currently, each browser makes different decisions about how to violate web standards to protect user privacy. The particulars of these privacy-protecting modifications differ from vendor to vendor (and sometimes, version to venison), leaving web authors unclear on what functionality will be available, even in a "private browsing" mode. This document hopes to form the basis for an eventual common set of functionality that web authors can target, without breaking their applications in "private browsing" modes. ## Further Clarifications of What This Document Is Not For clarity purposes, here is an incomplete enumeration of explicit non-goals of this document. ### Defining Vendor's Implementations of Private Browsing Modes Different browser vendors will implement private browsing modes in a way that fit the aims of the vendor and the browser's users. This document does not aim to prescribe any specific functionality (floor or ceiling) that browser vendors should implement in their respective private browsing modes. The target of this document is foremost standards authors, followed by (and indirectly) site authors. ### Comparison of Existing Private Browsing Modes All major browsers ship some form of a "private browsing" (or, heightened privacy) mode. While the similarities and differences between these modes, or the threat models they target, would be valuable, they are better left to blog authors and vendor documentation, and not standards bodies (or appendages there of). ### Clarification of the Aims of Private Browsing Modes Existing research has documented that users have widely varying understandings and expectations of what private browsing modes do. This is a significant problem, but not one targeted by this document. This document only recognizes that there is a frequent desire for privacy beyond whats provided by default in browsers, when they fully implement existing standards. ### A Request for Good Behavior on the Part of Websites Existing privacy preserving efforts (e.g. DNT) have shown that asking websites to respect user privacy is unlikely to be very useful. No part of this standard aims to tell websites "the user is requesting additional privacy, please don't violate their privacy". The aim of this document is to give standards authors a in-standard way of describing (possibly alternate) browser functionality that is more privacy protecting, without requiring website compliance / good behavior. ## Example Use of this Document This subsection gives a toy example of how this standard might be used by some future, trivial, standard. The example is meant to be clarifying, but is intentionally silly to avoid confusion with any existing or proposed standard. Assume some proposed standard called the "Real Name API", which would give web authors the ability to access to "true" name of the current user. The potential for the usefulness of this feature is plain, as is its potential for abuse. Currently the standard would most likely describe the functionality, possibly with some footnote or *note* saying "vendors may modify this functionality as desired to protect user privacy." This is sub optimal because it calls into question the usefulness of "standardization" in general, gives site authors no guidance in what to expect, and gives vendors no useful suggestions for how to modify the functionality in the standard to protect privacy. This standard aims to change this unsatisfactory status quo by allowing standards authors to write something like the following: "the real name API end point should return the user's name, unless the user is in private browsing mode, in which case the api end point should return 'jane doe'." Such in-standard definition of privacy preserving behavior, and when to expect it would meaningfully address each of the above mentioned shortcomings. ## Bless This Mess Author: Pete Snyder <pes@brave.com>
Received on Tuesday, 15 January 2019 17:42:52 UTC