Cookies
Cookies have become perhaps the most widely-recognized privacy risk, receiving a great deal of attention. Although HTML-writers most commonly use cookies for legitimate, desirable purposes, cases of abuse can and do occur.
An HTTP cookie consists of a piece of information stored on a user's computer to add statefulness to web-browsing. Systems do not generally make the user explicitly aware of the storing of a cookie. (Although some users object to that, it does not properly relate to Internet privacy, although it does have implications for computer privacy, and specifically for computer forensics).
The original developers of cookies intended that only the website that originally sent them would retrieve them, therefore giving back only data already possessed by the website. However, in actual practice programmers can circumvent this intended restriction. Possible consequences include:
- the possible placing of a personally-identifiable tag in a browser to facilitate web profiling (see below), or,
- possible use in some circumstances of cross-site scripting or of other techniques to steal information from a user's cookies.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Internet_privacy
1 comment:
Excellent article. Special thanks for the mention!
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