@dmarti @mcc @denschub To add support to this, by own experience, advertising analytics companies focused on TV and streaming ads often use "individually anonymized" data. historical data analysis enable demographic determination, including age, gender, geographic location, household size, income level, behavioral trends, and viewing context (whether the ad is watched at home, at a neighbor's, or in a sports bar). The cross-referencing of this data provides insights into both household and individual preferences. It's not just about anonymizing a single data source; it's the cumulative analysis of multiple data points that matters. Thinking that anonymizing a single data source is harmless is a narrow and naive view.

Enabling and making the user part of this data tracking and analysis effort by default is clearly a "profit first" view, considering that the browser has automatic updates. Sure, some developers and other technical audience might closely track blog posts, repositories, etc., but the browser is targeted to a general audience.

Sorry, I’m not engaging on Reddit. Simply pointing out that other platforms have issues too doesn't address the specific problems with Reddit. Recognizing and addressing the unique issues of each platform is crucial.