June 30, 2026

How Digital Fingerprinting Helps Identify Duplicate Survey Respondents 

Imagine discovering at the end of a project that several respondents in your sample were actually the same person. It's not as uncommon as many researchers would like to believe.

Fraudulent respondents can bypass traditional controls designed to prevent repeat participation by using multiple email addresses, VPN services and private browsing tools.
In this article, we’ll explore the limitations of traditional tools, how digital fingerprinting works, and how it helps researchers identify duplicate respondents.
Why Traditional Tools Are No Longer Enough
Researchers have traditionally relied on cookies and IP addresses to identify repeat participation. While these methods still play an important role, respondents can clear cookies, switch browsers or use private browsing modes to bypass them. IP addresses also have limitations, as multiple users may share the same address, while a single respondent can appear under different IP addresses over time.

What Is Digital Fingerprinting? 

Digital fingerprinting helps address these limitations. Rather than relying on a single identifier, it analyses multiple characteristics of a device and browsing environment, including:
  • Browser configuration 
  • Operating system details 
  • Device characteristics 
  • Screen resolution 
  • Language settings 
  • Network information 
  • Behavioural patterns 
When combined, these attributes create a unique fingerprint that helps identify patterns associated with repeat respondents.

For example, a respondent may attempt to complete the same survey multiple times using different email addresses and browsers. While traditional checks may treat these as separate individuals, digital fingerprinting can identify shared device characteristics and flag the activity for review. 

How Digital Fingerprinting Tools Work

Several specialised solutions are available to help researchers identify duplicate participation before it affects data quality.

Platforms such as Research Defender, CleanID and DeviceForensics use digital fingerprinting alongside risk scoring and fraud detection algorithms to evaluate respondent activity.

Many platforms also analyse proxy usage, automation signals and behavioural indicators alongside device fingerprints.

While each platform uses its own methodology, they all aim to reduce fraudulent participation. 

Combining Traditional and Modern Fraud Prevention Tools

Digital fingerprinting and IP intelligence are often used together, but they serve different purposes. 

IP addresses provide information about location and network activity. Device fingerprints analyse multiple characteristics to identify patterns across devices and sessions.
Together, IP intelligence and digital fingerprinting provide a more complete view of respondent activity.

Conclusion

Cookies and IP addresses still play an important role, but they are no longer enough on their own. Digital fingerprinting helps researchers identify duplicate respondents and protect data quality.
Download the Fraud Prevention Guide

Digital fingerprinting is just one part of an effective fraud prevention strategy. Download our guide to explore the best practices and tools used to protect data quality across the entire research lifecycle. 

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