The more disconcerting feature is the "Trackers Map." Norton visualizes every request your browser makes, coloring lines from your computer to tracking domains worldwide. Seeing your browser talk to 47 third-party servers just to load a recipe article is a visceral experience. For many users, that map alone justifies the subscription. No privacy tool is absolute. Norton AntiTrack has three meaningful gaps.
Think of your physical fingerprint: whorls, loops, arches unique to you. A browser fingerprint is a composite of hundreds of data points: your screen resolution, operating system, installed fonts, time zone, language, WebGL renderer, even the way your graphics card processes an image. Alone, each data point is trivial. Together, they form a signature so distinct that researchers have shown it can identify 99% of users, even without cookies.
A determined tracker can still correlate your approximate location and ISP. Norton recommends pairing AntiTrack with a VPN for complete anonymity, but that requires a separate subscription (Norton Secure VPN, sold separately). norton antitrack
When you enable AntiTrack, it intercepts fingerprinting scripts before they execute. Instead of blocking them outright (which many websites detect and punish by refusing service), AntiTrack injects noise. It temporarily alters your browser’s reported attributes: changing your time zone by an hour, randomizing your installed fonts list, slightly tweaking your screen resolution.
And in 2026, that might be the closest thing to privacy we can realistically achieve. Norton AntiTrack is a feature of Norton 360 Deluxe. Prices and availability vary by region. No tool provides absolute anonymity; always practice good digital hygiene. The more disconcerting feature is the "Trackers Map
Norton’s counterargument rests on consent. A cookie banner, however annoying, at least asks permission. Fingerprinting happens in silence. You cannot reject a fingerprint. You cannot negotiate with WebGL renderer checks. AntiTrack restores the ability to say no—not to advertising, but to invisible surveillance.
They discovered .
It isn’t. It’s reading your browser’s fingerprints.