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Update src/content/en/2025/privacy.md
Co-authored-by: Jannis Rautenstrauch <33023300+JannisBush@users.noreply.github.com>
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@@ -47,7 +47,7 @@ In this chapter, we provide a technical overview of the state of web privacy. We
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Our analysis uses the [WhoTracks.Me](https://www.ghostery.com/whotracksme/) catalog of popular third-party trackers to identify the trackers present on the webpages. To be conservative in our analysis, we only count the WhoTracksMe categories 'advertising', 'pornvertising', 'site_analytics' and 'social_media' as trackers. This method allows us to determine the distinct third-party trackers at the domain level for each webpage. It is worth noting that the reported numbers represent unique domains, not the total number of HTTP requests.
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Our analysis uses the [WhoTracks.Me](https://www.ghostery.com/whotracksme/) catalog of popular third-party trackers to identify the trackers present on the webpages. To be conservative in our analysis, we only count the WhoTracksMe categories advertising’, ‘pornvertising’, ‘site_analytics and social_media as trackers. This method allows us to determine the distinct third-party trackers at the domain level for each webpage. It is worth noting that the reported numbers represent unique domains, not the total number of HTTP requests.
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We see at least one third-party tracker in 75% of all webpages (75%: desktop, 74%: mobile), 55% of desktop webpages contain 2 and 39% contain 3 trackers. Up to 6 trackers setup happens more often in desktop pages, while 7 and more trackers are seen more often in mobile pages.
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