Collusion
Collusion is an experimental add-on for Firefox and allows you to see all the third parties that are tracking your movements across the Web. It will show, in real time, how that data creates a spider-web of interaction between companies and other trackers.
What we are working on now for Collusion includes:
- What do I do now? Usability improvements to help you take control of your browsing privacy.
- Too much data, what does it mean? Visualization improvements for when the tracker graph grows unwieldy.
- How does this compare to others? Anonymously share your tracker data with Mozilla so we can build a bigger picture of who is tracking what.
- What are the trends? A public API from the tracker database for mashups, specialized visualizations, etc. Track whether a site gets more or less invasive over time, how your favourite sites fare, and much more.
Contents
More information
Preview releases of Firefox add-on
Source code for Firefox add-on (classic)
Source code for Firefox add-on (refresh)
Source code for website redesign
Source code for public database server
Unofficial Collusion theme song
What They Know The Wall Street Journal's extensive series on tracking.
Ghostery's research blog Lots of info about various types of trackers.
What's coming in Collusion 1.0 - video
A Morning Cup of Coffee - interactive teaser video about Collusion
Get the add-on
Latest released version of the add-on
Communication Channels
Weekly meetings will be Thursdays, 11am Pacific.
collusion@mozilla.org Mailing List
IRC channel is #collusion on irc.mozilla.org.
collusion-dev@mozilla.org Development mailing list
Collusion Sub-Pages
Wiki
Roles (RACI Matrix)
Etherpad
Collusion Weekly Meeting Notes Updated weekly
Collusion Data Discussion 2012-10-09
Collusion reboot meeting 2012-08-30
News and blog posts
The original Collusion blog post by Atul Varma: http://www.toolness.com/wp/2011/07/collusion/
The Next Phase of the Collusion Project David Ascher's post
Explaining Third-Party Cookies by Heather Tsang
Cookies exposed through infographics by Sabrina Ng
Emily Carr Design Team's Tumblr blog for all things (useful and other) related to the Collusion visualization.
Happy Privacy Day! An Update from the Collusion Visualization Design Team
Recommended Reading
Web Privacy Issues
Collusion Development
Visualizing Data: Exploring and Explaining Data with the Processing Environment by Ben Fry
Processing: : A Programming Handbook for Visual Designers and Artists by Casey Reas and Ben Fry
D3 is the graphic library we are currently using for the Collusion visualization
Getting Started
If you would like to work on creating new visualizations, or modifying the existing one(s), we are working to add that facility with a workshop mode. There will be an announcement on the collusion-dev mailing list, and more information here when that happens.