more cookie-related security problems
In a previous post, I linked to an article on automated "price customization" using cookie information. Turns out that even if you're deleting your cookies regularly, you may not be . . . .
via /.: Marketers seek to make cookies more palatable
The most disturbing part doesn't technically involve cookies at all:
("Mookie"?)
The article also mentions that Macromedia provides instructions for turning off PIE. Those are here (I had to go hunting for them). Haven't tried applying these instructions yet.
via /.: Marketers seek to make cookies more palatable
The most disturbing part doesn't technically involve cookies at all:
One Internet marketing-services company that uses cookies, New York-based United Virtualities, says it has chosen to fight fire with fire rather than try to engage antispyware makers in talks. When antispyware companies use a "technology trick" to zap cookies, "the response has to be technological," says the company's founder, Mookie Tenembaum.
The company has begun marketing a technology known as a persistent identification element, or PIE. The tool uses features in Macromedia Inc.'s popular Flash software, which is used for designing and viewing animated online ads, to secretly make backup copies of a user's cookies before they are deleted. A handful of Web publishers and advertising companies are using the technology to track users, according to Mr. Tenembaum, though he declines to name them.
("Mookie"?)
The article also mentions that Macromedia provides instructions for turning off PIE. Those are here (I had to go hunting for them). Haven't tried applying these instructions yet.
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