Norton Antitrack Verified Site
In the 1990s, tracking was simple: a cookie file sat on your computer, telling a website, "This visitor was here yesterday." By the 2010s, browsers began blocking third-party cookies—the kind that follow you across domains. Privacy advocates cheered. Trackers, however, simply evolved.
Some news portals and streaming services use fingerprinting not just for ads but for session validation. If your fingerprint changes mid-session, they may log you out or flag your behavior as suspicious. Norton addresses this with an feature, where you disable AntiTrack for specific domains. It’s a compromise: security and privacy at the cost of occasional friction. norton antitrack
The ideal user occupies the middle ground: you are technically literate enough to worry about fingerprinting, but you lack the time to harden Firefox manually. You already subscribe to Norton for antivirus and VPN. You want one interface to manage tracking across all your devices (Windows, Mac, iOS, Android). You are willing to tolerate occasional site breakage in exchange for not being followed. In the 1990s, tracking was simple: a cookie


