Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Browser fingerprinting.
What does that mean? I use Chrome but so do 50 million others.
Browser fingerprinting is the answer. Why don't you try looking it up. Your browser tells website enough to know exactly who you are. You can see some of what makes a browser fingerprint at
https://amiunique.org/fingerprint
I don’t think OP understands how hard it will be to get around this. His browser fingerprinting will likely be tracked by one of many tracking services that Reddit employs, it’s not just Reddit that will ID him. This if he gets a new laptop, it may work if he is from a new IP address and network and not logged into anything else at all (or buys a new phone from like Verizon and ONLY uses it for Reddit). But once he starts his normal work of gmail and bank accounts or truthsocial cookies, those services will identify him and add this device to his identity set.
So you need to buy a separate phone, use it only for Reddit on mobile (never home WiFi), and post with some forethought.