Where did you get the uniqueness stat? You can't just divide by the total number of possibilities, for example, because not all combinations are equally represent. To get a real estimate you'd need a large sampling of users' browser fingerprints, which I imagine is hard to do.
Goddamn that's pretty specific. I've recently moved to graphene which has many features I've yet to discover, but often I wonder if mitigations simply make you more obvious in your divergence from the norms. I've often wondered if the best way to blend in would be to surf from a Starbucks using Safari with no extensions running on MacOS.
I tried it in another browser and using safari this test can’t show the correct iOS version I’m using. Are Safari doing a great job or is this about WebKit that every browser in iOS have to use it?
This is a rather impossible battle to win as long as we insist on having such a feature-packed web. The more we try to protect ourselves against fingerprinting, the less hampered our experience becomes.
I use LibreWolf (a privacy-centric Firefox fork) which normalizes my timezone to UTC, makes my window size less unique, disables certain HTML5 features and a ton of other small tweaks – but it only helps to a small extent, and it's not easy to reason about. I'm just hoping what I do is measurably better than nothing.
There are alternatives to the web, especially Gemini, which have essentially zero fingerprintable surface. But these are mere geek novelties and will never have broad appeal.