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Monday, May 18, 2026

Sources & Confessions. Every observation on this page came from your own browser

 'Art is never finished, only abandoned.'

~ Leonardo da Vinci


Taken. You opened this page. It already knows the following

Sources & Confessions. Every observation on this page came from your own browser, in the first milliseconds after you arrived. The words were written by a human. A few honest footnotes follow. TAKEN

  • Your location – ip-api.com · Free tier · CC-BY-SA – Your IP address arrives in the header of every request your device makes. We pass it to ip-api.com to translate it into a city and an internet provider name. The lookup is transient. Neither side stores it. Under GDPR, an IP address can be considered personal data when used for tracking. We do not track. We do not retain. We do not log. We display only the first and last octet on screen. We know the rest. We chose not to display it.
  • Browser APIs – MDN Web Docs · Mozilla · CC-BY-SA 2.5 – Every observation about your device (screen, browser, language, GPU, cores, battery, fonts, preferences) was retrieved through standard JavaScript APIs documented openly by Mozilla. No exploits, no vulnerabilities, no hacks. Everything on this page is by design. The design is the problem.
  • The technique of detecting installed fonts by measuring rendered text widths has been documented since 2010. The EFF maintains a tool that lets you see how unique your browser is. Most browsers are unique enough to be tracked across the open web without any cookie at all. The combination of fonts is one of the strongest signals.
  • Canvas fingerprinting – Princeton University · Web Transparency & Accountability Project – A 2014 study from Princeton was the first to document canvas fingerprinting in the wild. Researchers found it on 5% of the top 100,000 websites: pages that secretly asked the visitor’s browser to draw a hidden image, then read the rendered pixels back as an identifier. Your browser supports the technique. We did not draw one. The page you visit after this one might.
  • Clipboard API – MDN · Clipboard API specification – With a single user gesture (a click, a tap), a page can request to read the last thing you copied. A password. An address. A draft message. The capability is announced by every modern browser. We did not request it. The capability is there, available to any page that asks at the right moment…”