UglyEmail reveals when senders secretly track your email activity, personal info
Advertising companies aren’t just tracking your web browsing habits—some
marketers secretly monitor your email usage to discover a startling
amount of information about you, too.
While senders are limited to only tracking specific messages they’ve
sent to you, doing so can reveal whether you’ve opened the email or
clicked any links in the message. It can also expose your general
location and what kind of device you’re using.
If you’re curious about which messages are monitoring you and which one’s aren’t, a new extension for Chrome called UglyEmail
can help. This extension—by developer Sonny Tulyaganov—monitors your
inbox to find messages using pixel tracking. This is a common marketing
technique where companies insert a transparent (and therefore invisible
to you) one-pixel image into a message.
The pixel image has code in it designed to send back information about
you to the company. As soon as you open a message with a pixel tracker
in it, the image pings the marketer’s servers and the information flow
begins. Pixel tracking shows up in all kinds of messages, including
newsletters you subscribe to.
Thanks to UglyEmail you can find out when a message has a tracker and decide not to open that email.
UglyEmail helps you watch the watchers.
Using UglyEmail is simple. Just install the extension from the Chrome
Web Store and it should start working. In my tests, it didn’t show up
until after I’d restarted Chrome, opened a Gmail tab, and then refreshed
that same tab.
When it’s working, you'll see an eye icon next to the name of the
message’s sender, as pictured in the image above. This allows you to see
at a glance which messages are tracking you.
UglyEmail isn’t perfect, however. For starters, it only alerts you to
messages with pixel trackers from three companies: Yesware, Bananatag,
and Streak. The extension is also a little finicky. If you switch from
the Primary tab to the Social tab in your inbox, for example, the
UglyEmail icons you saw in the Primary tab will disappear. UglyEmail
doesn’t work with Google Inbox, either.
UglyEmail also needs permission to “read” your email to be of any use, which is oh, oh so
ironic. The good news is Tulyaganov told Wired that any personal data
stays on your device and doesn’t get stored or transmitted by the
extension.
Any performance issues and limitations should improve as development
continues on UglyEmail. For now the extension is only for Gmail and only
works on Chrome, but a Firefox version is in the works.