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Re: Re: Re: Price Discrimination on Internet
- To: pen-l@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
- Subject: Re: Re: Re: Price Discrimination on Internet
- From: ravi <gadfly@xxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Tue, 28 May 2002 10:46:40 -0400
- User-agent: Mozilla/5.0 (X11; U; FreeBSD i386; en-US; rv:1.0rc2) Gecko/20020511
Rob Schaap wrote:
G'day Sabri,
But when you visit a website that
dropped that cookie on your computer, the website has access to
the cookie and can process that information on your computer. Why
is this not also a violation of privacy according to the US law?
I was under the (unusually optimistic) impression that cookies could in
fact not do that. It records browser info, but doesn't penetrate your
HD, I thought. Am I to be disillusioned yet again?
yes and no. cookies are stored on your hard disk by the browser (not
by the web server - the web server sends a cookie to your browser.
its up to the browser and/or you to accept that cookie. if you use a
browser like internet explorer that choice is often made for you by
the browser). the information that is stored in the cookie can be
any arbitrary text and is limited only by size.
some particular clarifications:
1) while cookies are stored as files on your computer, that does
not mean they are like software. a cookie cannot find things out
about you by exploring your disk or watching what you do. its
just a file (or part of a file), its not software.
2) information that is stored in the cookie can be personal info
about you only if you have submitted that information in some
way. if a cookie contains your date of birth, thats there
because you provided that information somewhere in a web form or
some such.
3) cookies can be and are used to track your behaviour. cookie info
can be shared across sites and this is used not only for tracking
your preferences/behaviour or customizing your content but also
provide a means for those who have personal information about you
(say amazon.com, your bank, etc) to share that information
(unless prevented by law).
4) all of this is true in the ideal world. browser security holes
can and often compromise the security of your system and the
information on it. microsoft's tight integration of its various
technologies (windows <-> explorer <-> VBscript/ActiveX/etc)
often blurs the boundaries of the sandbox security model that
avoids various security pitfalls.
plug:
for better control over the cookies stored on your system:
http://www.mozilla.org/ -- mozilla release candidate 3
if you do choose to download and install mozilla, i will give you
unlimited assistance with using it (to the extent that i can).
--ravi
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