So…. Use Unix or Linux or *BSD. Or any other free and open OS. Alternately, use a Windows VM and in that VM disable diagtrack and dmwappushservice plus a Pi-hole.
Any commercial OS will track you.
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I am of the mind that _all_ operating systems would have a form of GDID within them. Even the chips themselves can be queried for unique IDs.
It’s actually a must since they need to identify themselves in a unique manner when pooled in a farm of some kind.
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Maybe my thinking is all wrong but I wonder:
I’m going to look further into this but it still seems like a local account would answer for much/all the privacy concerns.
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All of this exposes the so-called “VPN” industry for what they are.
Linux generates unique IDs as well, but they are technically editable in most if not all distros without killing the system. Live distros that boot off read-only media will often create a random one on boot. So, for tracking purposes (privacy), I’d expect it’s far safer.
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You mean that they are relatively worthless? Yes, I agree.
More so, IMO, it exposes Microsoft’s telemetry is far more malicious (? Perhaps a poor word choice, but “BAD”) than previously known.
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The GDID is tied to about 20 pieces of h/w information. However, that’s not really the problem.
The problem is that your Windows device “phones home” on quite a regular basis and updates Microsoft servers with quite a bit of data – including your IP address and, at some level, your connection history.
A local account does not prevent that.
However, as I wrote elsewhere (I’ve commented quite a bit on this topic today, I can’t keep it all straight), the data Microsoft keeps/acquires increases astronomically for devices that are registered with Azure/Intune.
Yeah, I reached the “all tech is evil” threshold years ago with zero trust across the board.
It’s one of the reasons I’m looking forward to finishing our on-premises AI build.
I have lots of curiosity questions that I’m sure the software can answer for me based on my conversations with some very smart people. Much smarter than I! 😉
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Absolutely.
But I don’t think that the free/open OSes I mentioned phone home to corporate hq to store all the computer data for interrogation…
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One of my To Do List items on the “I am a Luddite Because … “ list is to set up each OS in a firewalled setup where there’s only a DNS server serving the newly stood up OS.
I know Microsoft related subdomains light up like crazy but I’ve not taken the time to document them.
Then, there’s the Ubuntu ones as well.
That alone should give one an idea of what the OS is doing once it comes up.
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Heh … the “hot” red wire was accidentally wired neutral? 😉
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That’s why I also recommend a Pi-hole…
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Okay, have you put the Pi-Hole behind something else to see what it’s doing when it’s fired up?
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No, it logs all queries. It has a great reporting package.
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My question wasn’t worded very well relative to what was in my head.
Rephrase: When the Pi-Hole is set up is there something monitoring what it’s doing between it and the WAN?
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Yes, there’s a firewall. By default in the Pi-Hole distribution, only DNS is open.
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