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#3rdpartytrackers — Public Fediverse posts

Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #3rdpartytrackers, aggregated by home.social.

  1. TITLE: hipaalink.net security initial testing

    A therapist on another list asked if anyone had experience with hipaalink.net televideo service.

    This looks like a promising small company with some neat features at only $9.95 per month. See below first however. I really don’t like that Facebook Connect is being contacted from the client’s browser when they login!

    I spent a lot of time fighting to sign-up (had to change my settings to see their Captcha challenges). More of a problem – there was a very basic malfunction in the password selection process. Some “special characters” (you have to have one in the password) would not work (+ and #). I eventually got “-” to work. I got an almost immediate call-back when I sent a message about trouble picking a password (bug in our system, thank you for finding it, our programmers are fixing “special characters” this evening).

    Did eventually set-up a 30-day free trial. So I can further tests later if I want to.

    I noticed that hipaalink.net/<mysite> works, but hipaalink.net/<mysite> does not – another simple thing for their programming team to fix. (Older people are very used to “www” in front of everything, so this redirect should function.)

    I kinda feel like I ought to be charging for debugging services.

    I have not actually tried out video sessions yet. I’ve just run Privacy Badger and Ghostery browser plug-ins in both Opera and Firefox. Results:

    CLIENT LOGIN PAGE: Privacy Badger: www.googletagmanager.com – cookies blocked fonts.gstatic.com – cookies blocked

    Ghostery: Facebook Connect – BLOCKED! Google Tag Manager – allowed

    CLIENT IN-SESSION: Privacy Badger: www.googletagmanager.com – cookies blocked fonts.gstatic.com – cookies blocked

    Ghostery: Facebook Connect – BLOCKED! Google Tag Manager – allowed

    ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

    THERAPIST LOGIN PAGE: Privacy Badger:

    www.googletagmanager.com -- cookies blocked
    fonts.gstatic.co -- cookies blocked

    Ghostery: Google Analytics – “tracking not detected” it says Google Tag Manager – allowed Google APIs – allowed Google Static – allowed

    THERAPIST IN-SESSION: (The same) Privacy Badger: www.googletagmanager.com – cookies blocked fonts.gstatic.co – cookies blocked

    Ghostery:

    Google Analytics – “tracking not detected” it says Google Tag Manager – allowed Google APIs – allowed Google Static – allowed

    ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

    It’s necessary for some cookies and tracking to the functioning of a website. Privacy Badger and Ghostery are both detecting some of this from Google libraries which they choose to allow. I don’t have enough security engineering knowledge to know if these are harmless or not. I do know they are very common on most websites. Yet – Privacy Badger says they are blocking some cookies…

    Facebook should not be contacted on the client side! I don’t know what Ghostery is blocking from being sent to Facebook, but this should not be on a HIPAA site. The connection between therapist and client seemed at first glance to work fine with Facebook blocked. I will discuss this with Hipaalink.net before I test it with actual clients. For now I give them the benefit of the doubt. I am told by a computer engineer that Facebook supplies some code libraries (like Google) which websites can use – maybe this is not intentional tracking, just their developers needing to fix this?

    There is more tracking taking place on the home page and more public sections of the website than inside the login and televideo areas. So some effort to decrease tracking has been made for actual clients. I see different trackers on the public areas of the website today than I did when I first checked on 7/24/23.

    It’s a maybe… But at $9.95 per month hipaalink.net could be a nice option if they clean up minor tracking concerns. Again, I have not tested the video yet.

    #psychology #neurology #socialwork #psychiatry @psychology @socialwork @psychiatry #mentalhealth #psychotherapists @psychotherapists #cookies #tracking #hacking #3rdpartytrackers #HIPAA #privacy #dataprivacy #webbeacons #telehealth #video #doxy #healthcare #dataprotection #hipaalink #hipaalinknet

  2. 2 of 2

    Doxy is technically HIPAA compliant according to them and I can’t PROVE otherwise.

    In October 2021 – logging in as a CLIENT – I traced (via Pihole and the Lightbeam Firefox plug-in) their website having my web browser contact connections to Google (multiple), Youtube (multiple), Facebook, Doubleclick, Hotjar, Mixpanel, and Segment ad networks/trackers/data aggregators. Heavy additional use of outside support tools from Google, Amazon (their web hosting provider), Cloudflare, Cloudfront, and other outside supporting services.

    There was just no excuse for that from a company only providing medical telehealth.

    Since then Doxy seems to call on fewer outside supporting services, and last I looked (April 2022) they ran their data tracking services through one specific company – which could then redistribute data to all the above companies. Or not.

    The devil here is in what constitutes Protected Health Information (PHI). In 2022 Doxy privacy policies discussed only collecting “anonymized” data and no PHI. Sounds great. However, please see:

    Use of Online Tracking Technologies by HIPAA Covered Entities and Business Associates hhs.gov/hipaa/for-professional

    This HHS and OCR guidance includes the sorts of 3rd party tracking technologies DOXY is likely referring to in their privacy policies.

    Then of course, there is this: Yes, someone really did name their service Doxy.me (“Doc See Me” according to the company). There are several double meanings here. Doxx or doxxing – hacker slang for spreading sensitive private information all over the Internet to defame someone. Webster’s Dictionary – Doxy – a prostitute. merriam-webster.com/dictionary

    No disrespect intended to sex workers in the use of the possible slur “prostitute” here.

    ................................
    @psychology @socialwork @psychiatry @psychotherapists
    #psychology #neurology #socialwork #psychiatry #mentalhealth #psychotherapists #cookies #tracking #hacking #3rdpartytrackers #HIPAA #privacy #dataprivacy #webbeacons #telehealth #video #doxy #healthcare

  3. 1 of 2

    TITLE: Doxy.me Privacy Considerations

    Here is a posting or two from April 2022 when I took a look at Doxy.me privacy policies in force at that time. I am of course not a lawyer and could misunderstand something. Maybe.

    As you read this, please keep in mind: Use of Online Tracking Technologies by HIPAA Covered Entities and Business Associates hhs.gov/hipaa/for-professional

    This HHS and OCR guidance includes several sorts of 3rd party tracking technologies possibly in use by Doxy.

    To be crystal clear – I am NOT accusing Doxy of breaking HIPAA or other laws, sharing PHI, or sharing video content. I am “accusing” them of doing exactly what they allow themselves to do in their “privacy” policy – communicate “de-identified and anonymized” data to 3rd parties having little to nothing to do with the operation of the service. The huge problem is that “de-identified and anonymized” data can be easily reattached to client names by any data broker worth their salt with a big enough database.

    – Michael

    On Thu, Apr 14, 2022 at 12:54 AM Michael wrote:

    doxy.me/en/privacy-policy/

    Picture me having an angry laugh (at Doxy, not you) as I read this "privacy"policy. It’s ridiculous.

    In summary: They give themselves permission to do quite a lot, and by using their product, you are consenting to it. They say they are “anonymizing” everything – but what good is that if the data can be used to easily reconstruct client identity? They don’t say they are sending along tracking cookie data to 3rd parties, but they give themselves permission to do it.

    A few choice pointers:

    “This Privacy Policy describes Our policies and procedures on the collection, use and disclosure of Your information—when You use the Doxy.me Service or visit this web site”

    Your permission is granted…

    “Usage Data is collected automatically… Usage Data may include information such as Your Device’s Internet Protocol address, browser type, browser version, the pages of our Service that You visit, the time and date of Your visit, the time spent on those pages, unique device identifiers, and other diagnostic data. However, this Usage Data is de-identified and anonymized and not linked to a particular data. As such, it is not considered personal information; it is incidental to providing the Service.”

    Several Internet security sources point out (sorry – I don’t have a reference immediately available) that when data brokers accumulate several data points on you (such as browser type, IP address, “other diagnostic data”) that it can act as a unique fingerprint to figure out who you are. Keep in mind that data brokers track across several websites across time. This is exactly the sort of information that cookies are commonly used for to store and pass along.

    Internet Protocol address – If a user happens to have a static IP address, this is a unique identifier of the user. If its not static, it still serves to pinpoint the general geographic area the person is in (unless a VPN is used) and can be combined with other data to identify the person.

    Unique device identifiers – Each device (laptop, smart phone, etc.) has a unique serial code that identifies it. If this information is being passed along to 3rd parties, its a unique fingerprint of the person.

    Let’s take an easy fictional example – let’s say a client creates a Google account. In the process of creating the Google account, the client enters their name. Let’s say Google also captures their unique device identifier at that time. Now then, if the unique device identifier is passed along to Google whenever that person visits a website (say doxy.me for example), Google knows the name of the person visiting the website because its already in Google’s database.

    “de-identified and anonymized” data – Sure. Internet Protocol address, browser type, browser version, unique device identifiers, and other diagnostic data do not have the client’s name attached – or any other PHI data. But so what – the data broker already has a database to readily reattach the client’s name when/if this information is provided.

    "We may also collect information that Your browser sends whenever You visit this Website "

    Well, I don’t know – does this mean they can capture anything else your web browser is sending out at the time you are connected to their website?

    Cookies:
    “Any use of Cookies – or of other tracking tools – by Us or by the owners of third-party services used by Us serves the purpose of providing the Service as requested by You.”

    Hmmm… Slippery. We are requesting/consenting to anything they do as defined earlier in the document.

    From: doxy.me/en/cookie-policy/
    " Please be aware that some Cookies are required to use the Doxy.me Service; some are useful but not mandatory to measure and improve performance; and some are used for advertising or marketing activities that customize information based on your interests."

    So – yes – they ARE using cookies to advertise and market to our clients.

    They do at least promise not to pass along PHI or name information.

    They may or may not be passing along the above information to 3rd parties, but my September 2021 investigation showed that their servers WERE contacting 3rd parties (some known to be data brokers / ad networks). SOMETHING was passed along.

    – Michael

    On 4/13/2022 5:24 PM, NAME REDACTED__ wrote:

    Based on Michale’s recent post, I contacted the legal office at doxy.me to ask whether doxy.me does the following:

    “Doxy.me reports out cross-site tracking cookies to at least 10+ different services including Google, YouTube, Facebook, LinkedIn, and Hotbot.”

    The legal department directed me to their policies here:

    doxy.me/en/privacy-policy/

    Please look at this page, especially the sections labeled “If You are a Provider” and “If You are a Patient.”

    I could not find anything to indicate that doxy.me shares cookies or any other information with anyone.

    If anyone can find specific information to the contrary in doxy.me’s policies, please share.

    Thank you– NAME REDACTED

    ..............
    #psychology #neurology #socialwork #psychiatry @psychology @socialwork @psychiatry #mentalhealth #psychotherapists @psychotherapists #cookies #tracking #hacking #3rdpartytrackers #HIPAA #privacy #dataprivacy #webbeacons #telehealth #video #doxy #healthcare

  4. UPDATE:

    Zoom Video and Zoom Info are TWO DIFFERENT companies. Sorry everyone.

    Still not a bad idea to get out of their database however.

    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
    This is Zoom's privacy policy. It is an amazing piece of legal engineering granting them the rights to buy, sell, and gather just about any data about business users they want -- including listing you in a Business or Professional Profile (the "directory"):

    zoominfo.com/about-zoominfo/pr

    This is their form to opt-out of all tracking in their database which they use to sell your information to 3rd parties. Somewhat ironically, this page won't work unless you turn-off Privacy Badger and Ghostery web browser plug-ins:

    zoominfo.com/privacy-center/up

    If you use Zoom at work through a business account and don't wish to be listed, consider opting out. They are also collecting information from around the Web outside of Zoom apparently to help build out your profile.

    #psychology #neurology #socialwork #psychiatry @psychology @socialwork @psychiatry #mentalhealth #psychotherapists @psychotherapists #cookies #tracking #hacking #3rdpartytrackers #HIPAA #privacy #dataprivacy #webbeacons #videoconference #televideo #telehealth #zoom #databrokers

  5. *TITLE: OT: Amazon's Ring cameras were used to spy on customers**
    *malwarebytes.com/blog/news/202

    There were some really egregious examples here -- like for a time any
    employee could view any video feed.  Also hackers talking back to and
    scaring people through their ring cameras.

    I am not a technophobe -- in fact, I am looking for cameras for my house
    for security reasons.  But I'm trying to figure out first how to run my
    own monitoring software on my own servers.

    malwarebytes.com/blog/news/202

    --
    *Michael Reeder, LCPC
    *
    *Hygeia Counseling Services : Baltimore / Mt. Washington Village location*

     #psychology @psychology #mentalhealth #psychotherapists
    @psychotherapists #cookies #tracking #3rdpartytrackers #HIPAA
    #privacy #dataprivacy #webbeacons#ring #doorcams #cameras #monitoring

  6. Thank you -- This is very interesting! I see the article discusses a lot more than just the ban -- like promising future areas for AI with safeguards.

    Meanwhile in the USA, Microsoft is working with one of the largest EHR systems (EPIC) to incorporate AI now. First stop -- writing responses to patient portal inquiries for doctors.

    #psychology #socialwork #psychiatry @psychology @socialwork @psychiatry #mentalhealth #psychotherapists @psychotherapists #cookies #tracking #3rdpartytrackers #HIPAA #privacy #dataprivacy #webbeacons #AI #chatgpt #Australia #EPIC #Microsoft

    @Dinkenfunkle

  7. I've said several times that the Signal messaging app may not be HIPAA compliant.

    I was likely wrong.

    From another thread (thank you Siderea): "You don't need a BAA from Signal to be in compliance with HIPAA. Signal is one of the very few platforms that meets the carrier standard not to need one, because they have no access to the contents of messages sent through them."

    However, there is more to the story. You need to read this write-up from 2016 (so it may be dated):
    personcenteredtech.com/vendorr

    Person Centered Tech says it best (above), but some factors include:

    a) The need to keep copies of all communications in the client's chart. So you have to get messages out of Signal and into your chart. You also have to convince clients not to set their messages to self-destruct or you need to retrieve them before that happens! Signal messages (as of 2016) were not backed up automatically when your phone is backed-up. Lose your phone -- lose your messages.

    b) You may need client phone numbers stored in your phone. Do you store them not under their names (initials maybe)? Do you need a BAA agreement with the vendor that backs-up your phone directory?

    c) You may need to keep Signal from displaying client names on screen whenever you get a new pop-up alert of a new Signal message.

    -- Michael

    @siderea @psychology @socialwork @psychiatry @psychotherapists

    #psychology #socialwork #psychiatry #mentalhealth
    #psychotherapists #pharmacy
    #cookies #tracking #hacking
    #3rdpartytrackers #HIPAA #privacy #dataprivacy #webbeacons #Signal
    #telephony #SMS #messaging

  8. TITLE: Confusion in Text Messaging, Encryption, and HIPAA

    A therapist colleague of mine contacted Ring Central (a video and
    telephone platform that provides HIPAA BAA subcontractor paperwork upon
    request) with questions about their messaging capabilities and
    encryption.  They were looking for a compliant way to text message with
    clients.  The support staff directed them to this article:

    support.ringcentral.com/articl
    <support.ringcentral.com/articl>

    At first glance, the article would seem to make messaging with clients
    golden as a good level of encryption is described and the therapist has
    a HIPAA BAA with Ring Central.  Right?

    Wrong.

    A few different topics are getting confused here -- smart phone SMS text
    messaging, messaging within Ring Central apps and websites, and HIPAA
    BAA subcontractor agreements.

    With SMS text messaging by phone it will never be HIPAA compliant (even
    if the therapist sends it from within Ring Central) because the client
    will get the SMS text message unencrypted on their smartphone.

    Messaging within the Ring Central apps and website *IS* at an excellent
    level of encryption -- but won't be covered by the therapist's HIPAA BAA
    agreement unless the people messaged are also part of the therapist's
    company account or are other therapists with their own Ring Central
    accounts with HIPAA BAA subcontractor agreements.  This will rarely if
    ever cover therapy clients.

    This gets confusing.  So -- for example -- when I go into my Ring
    Central account online and click on "Message" I'm invited to email a
    messaging link to anyone I choose.  So far so good.  But when that
    person (like a client for example) goes to that messaging link, Ring
    Central REQUIRES them to sign up for their own FREE Ring Central
    account.  That FREE account WILL NOT be covered by a HIPAA BAA
    agreement.  So the messages sent to them (inside a Ring Central app or
    website) will be encrypted but not HIPAA compliant.

    Similar problem with Ring Central video conferencing.  As long as the
    client DOES NOT sign in with their own free account -- and instead goes
    to my anonymous video link -- it will be covered under my BAA agreement
    with Ring Central.  However, Ring Central invites clients to sign up for
    their own FREE account in order to video conference with me.  If the
    client makes that mistake, then its no longer a HIPAA compliant video
    conference session because only one of our two Ring Central accounts is
    covered by BAA.

    I sometimes wonder why this all is left in such a confusing state?

    Of course, I'm not a lawyer, so do your own research too.
    *
    Michael Reeder, LCPC
    *
    *Hygeia Counseling Services : Baltimore / Mt. Washington Village location*

     #psychology #neurology #socialwork #psychiatry @psychology
    @socialwork @psychiatry #mentalhealth
    #psychotherapists @psychotherapists #pharmacy
    #medicationchecker #drugs #druginteractions #cookies #tracking #hacking
    #3rdpartytrackers #HIPAA #privacy #dataprivacy #webbeacons#RingCentral
    #VoIP #telephony

  9. While this article from Livestrong has many good points about problems with fitness trackers, I notice that there is one they don't mention -- data aggregator tracking.

    Which is a shame since I observe Ghostery and Privacy Badger blocking 6-9 such URLs contacted when your browser visits this article.

    The Dark Side of Fitness Trackers
    livestrong.com/article/1371666

    #psychology #neurology #socialwork #psychiatry @psychology @socialwork @psychiatry #mentalhealth #psychotherapists @psychotherapists #pharmacy #medicationchecker #drugs #druginteractions #cookies #tracking #hacking #3rdpartytrackers #HIPAA #privacy #dataprivacy #webbeacons

  10. Signing away most all of your medical privacy rights in order to become
    a customer is way uncool and unacceptable:

    wapo.st/3p1uTJG

    ~~~
    To become an Amazon Clinic patient, first you sign away some privacy

    You agreed to what? The ‘HIPAA authorization’ for Amazon’s new
    low-cost clinic offers the tech giant more control over your health
    data.

    wapo.st/3p1uTJG

    --
    *Michael Reeder, LCPC
    *
    *Hygeia Counseling Services : Baltimore / Mt. Washington Village location*

     #psychology #neurology #socialwork #psychiatry @psychology
    @socialwork @psychiatry #mentalhealth
    #psychotherapists @psychotherapists #pharmacy
    #medicationchecker #drugs #druginteractions #cookies #tracking #hacking
    #3rdpartytrackers #HIPAA #privacy #dataprivacy #webbeacons

  11. TITLE: Online Pill Identifier: Search by Imprint, Shape, or Color (With
    Plenty of Data Tracking)

    Thank you Dr. Pope for initial message below.

    This is really cool.

    It should also be noted that when you use it, the drugs.com server
    communicates with -- and sends something about you -- to:

    securepubads.g.doubleclick.net
    stats.g.doubleclick.net
    www.google-analytics.com
    analytics.google.com
    fundingchoicesmessages.google.com
    www.googletagmanager.com
    fonts.gstatic.com
    www.gstatic.com
    ads.rubiconproject.com
    sb.scorecardresearch.com

    Don't pretend for a moment that what medications you are taking are
    likely to remain private.

    So load-up Ghostery and Privacy Badger into your web browser and hope
    for the best.

    -------- Forwarded Message --------

    Drugs.com
    <dmanalytics2.com/click?u=http%>
    provides an online pill identifier service.

     Here’s the announcement:

    Pill Identifier

    Search by imprint, shape or color

    Use the pill finder to identify medications by visual appearance or
    medicine name. All fields are optional.
    *
    *
    *Tip:* Search for the *imprint first*, then refine by color and/or shape
    if you have too many results.

    Here’s the link: drugs.com/imprints.php
    <dmanalytics2.com/click?u=https>

    PLEASE NOTE: The Drugs.com
    <dmanalytics2.com/click?u=http%> site
    also provides an interactions checker and other services.

    Ken Pope

    ~~~
    Merely forwarded by:
    Michael Reeder LCPC
    Baltimore, MD

     #psychology #neurology #socialwork #psychiatry @psychology
    @socialwork @psychiatry #mentalhealth
    #psychotherapists @psychotherapists #pharmacy
    #medicationchecker #drugs #druginteractions #cookies #tracking #hacking
    #3rdpartytrackers #HIPAA #privacy #dataprivacy #webbeacons