English, asked by soumitra29, 1 year ago

What is the theme of the poem television ?Explain in 500 to 600 words.​

Answers

Answered by za6715
19

Answer:

When you visit a website, you are of course observable by the site itself, but you are also observable by third-party trackers that the site embeds in its code. You might be surprised to learn that the vast majority of websites include many of these third-party trackers. Websites include them for a variety of reasons, like for advertising, analytics, and social media.

Each third-party tracker exposes some of your personal information to the company behind it. Further, when the same tracker is littered over many of the world’s websites, the company behind it can create a massive data collection by combining the data its tracker collects on each site. With so much data from so many websites, these widespread trackers (and the companies behind them) can develop extensive individual profiles, which can include browsing, location, search, and purchase history. Then, these profiles can be used for anything, including following you around the web with creepy advertising.

O on the Internet, which millions of sites and apps use to serve ads.

Additionally, Google runs the largest analytics network (Google Analytics), and Facebook encourages sites to embed extra Facebook tracking code to feed more detailed tracking data back into its ad profiling system (called Facebook Audiences). Sites also embed Google, Facebook and Twitter trackers for login as well as Facebook and Twitter for social sharing, but these companies can use data from these embeds to hyper-target ads on their own platforms and ad networks.

improve your privacy, but will also speed up your surfing and reduce your data usage. That’s because by blocking third-party trackers, you do not have to waste time or data loading them!

My company, DuckDuckGo, offers one of these tools, called . It not only blocks third-party trackers; it also groups them to make it easier for you to understand which companies are most frequently trying to track you. So, instead of just seeing a total number of trackers found and blocked, you can discover exactly which tracker networks (and the companies behind them) have been blocked from tracking you by using the tool.

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