What is GPC?

Global Privacy Control (GPC) Global Privacy Control) is a new initiative by researchers, news companies from the United States, some browser manufacturers, the EFF, some engines and certain other organizations to improve privacy and user rights on the Internet.

In one proposal, the GPC lets sites that a user links to know that the user denies the site the right to sell or share personal information with third parties.

Although it sounds like Do Not Track header 2.0, it is designed to work with existing (and future) legal frameworks such as the California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA) or the European General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR).

How does it work;

It all starts with a browser, and an extension or application that supports GPC. For now, this means a dev version of Brave, the DuckDuckGo app for Android or iOS, or browser extensions from DuckDuckGo, Disconnect, EFF, or Abine.

Brave has enabled GPC with no options to disable it, while other browsers, applications, or extensions may require users to enable it. In DuckDuckGo Privacy Browser, for example, it is necessary to enable Global Privacy Control from the settings to use it.

For users, the above are the only ones that currently exist. The browser, application or extension adds them GPC στα δεδομένα που υποβάλλονται κατά τη of links so websites know about it.

The next step depends entirely on the site the user is linking to. Non-participating sites will ignore the header.

When a site participates, it will ensure that user data is not shared or sold to third parties.

Will GPC become important?

The Do Not Track started with the hope that it would change the internet for the better, but it turned out not to be. In fact, it could even be used in fingerprinting efforts.

The fate of the GPC may be similar. At this time, support is limited to a few extensions, applications, a browser with a limited market share, and some participating sites. Some of the participating sites may be important, such as The New York Times, but their use is currently very limited.

Mozilla and Automattic (WordPress) are leading the effort but have not implemented any applications so far.

But even if these two companies, or maybe others, add support for GPC, the big internet companies like Google, Microsoft Apple, etc. should join.
So waiting.

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Written by giorgos

George still wonders what he's doing here ...

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