Ric writes,

> The announcement of the death of cookies is very premature ..


Yes, agreed Ric. Although an interesting and otherwise informative article 
(thanks Jan), in referring mainly to mobile phone net access, the author does 
seem rather carried away regarding his predicted death of cookies.

Cookies are indeed very much alive and well. 

On this point, can I strongly recommend that Linkers have a close look regards 
installing the EFF Organization browser add-on, the  "Privacy Badger". It's 
free, and amazing.

https://www.eff.org/privacybadger

In my experience, this add-on is absolutely GREAT. No problems at all, and it 
just blocks all cookies if you want.

For example, it tells you that the Sydney Morning Herald wants to set 24 
cookies, with around half a dozen being 'tracking' cookies which it blocks. 
Well, bugger that. I set the Badger to block EVERY cookie. And so it does, with 
zero problems. If this setting sometimes (very occasionally) interrupts the 
functionality of any particular website, in five seconds one can simply just 
reduce some of the Badger blocking strengths (from red to yellow or green for a 
few of the cookies) and then everything works perfectly again. Otherwise the 
Badger locks this computer down extremely tight. Nothing via the browser 
utilization/session is allowed to be saved and to track browser use. My 
computer must look like a brand new machine browsing for the first time, 
because of the Badger, my flash/java settings and doing frequent/daily windows 
'disk cleanups'.  For example ...

What is Privacy Badger?

Privacy Badger is a browser add-on that stops advertisers and other third-party 
trackers from secretly tracking where you go and what pages you look at on the 
web.  If an advertiser seems to be tracking you across multiple websites 
without your permission, Privacy Badger automatically blocks that advertiser 
from loading any more content in your browser.  To the advertiser, it's like 
you suddenly disappeared.

How is Privacy Badger different to Disconnect, Adblock Plus, Ghostery, and 
other blocking extensions?Privacy Badger was born out of our desire to be able 
to recommend a single extension that would automatically analyze and block any 
tracker or ad that violated the principle of user consent; which could function 
well without any settings, knowledge or configuration by the user; which is 
produced by an organization that is unambiguously working for its users rather 
than for advertisers; and which uses algorithmic methods to decide what is and 
isn't tracking.

Although we like Disconnect, Adblock Plus, Ghostery and similar products (in 
fact Privacy Badger is based on the ABP code!), none of them are exactly what 
we were looking for. In our testing, all of them required some custom 
configuration to block non-consensual trackers. Several of these extensions 
have business models that we weren't entirely comfortable with. And EFF hopes 
that by developing rigorous algorithmic and policy methods for detecting and 
preventing non-consensual tracking, we'll produce a codebase that could in fact 
be adopted by those other extensions, or by mainstream browsers, to give users 
maximal control over who does and doesn't get to know what they do online.

How does Privacy Badger work?

When you view a webpage, that page will often be made up of content from many 
different sources.  (For example, a news webpage might load the actual article 
from the news company, ads from an ad company, and the comments section from a 
different company that's been contracted out to provide that service.)  Privacy 
Badger keeps track of all of this.  If as you browse the web, the same source 
seems to be tracking your browser across different websites, then Privacy 
Badger springs into action, telling your browser not to load any more content 
from that source.  And when your browser stops loading content from a source, 
that source can no longer track you.  Voila!

At a more technical level, Privacy Badger keeps note of the "third party" 
domains that embed images, scripts and advertising in the pages you visit. If a 
third party server appears to be tracking you without permission, by using 
uniquely identifying cookies to collect a record of the pages you visit across 
multiple sites, Privacy Badger will automatically disallow content from that 
third party tracker. In some cases a third-party domain provides some important 
aspect of a page's functionality, such as embedded maps, images, or fonts. In 
those cases Privacy Badger will allow connections to the third party but will 
screen out its tracking cookies.

What is a third party tracker?

When you visit a webpage parts of the page may come from domains and servers 
other than the one you asked to visit. This is an essential feature of 
hypertext, but it has also come to be a serious privacy problem. On the modern 
Web, embedded images and code often use cookies and other methods to track your 
browsing habits — often to display advertisements. The domains that do this are 
called "third party trackers", and you can read more about how they work here.

What do the red, yellow and green sliders in the Privacy Badger menu mean?

The colors mean the following:

Green means there's a third party domain, but it hasn't yet been observed 
tracking you across multiple sites, so it might be unobjectionable. When you 
first install Privacy Badger every domain will be in this green state but as 
you browse, domains will quickly be classified as trackers.

Yellow means that the third party domain appears to be trying to track you, but 
it is on Privacy Badger's cookie-blocking "whitelist" of third party domains 
that, when analyzed, seemed to be necessary for Web functionality. In that 
case, Privacy Badger will load content from the domain but will try to screen 
out third party cookies and supercookies from it.

Red means that content from this third party tracker has been completely 
disallowed.Privacy Badger analyzes each third party's behavior over time, and 
picks what it thinks is the right setting for each domain, but you can adjust 
the sliders if you wish.

Why does Privacy Badger block ads?

Actually, nothing in the Privacy Badger code is specifically written to block 
ads. Rather, it focuses on disallowing any visible or invisible "third party" 
scripts or images that appear to be tracking you even though you specifically 
denied consent by sending a Do Not Track header. It just so happens that most 
(but not all) of these third party trackers are advertisements. When you see an 
ad, the ad sees you, and can track you. Privacy Badger is here to stop that.

Why doesn't Privacy Badger block all ads?

Because Privacy Badger is primarily a privacy tool, not an ad blocker. Our aim 
is not to block ads, but to prevent non-consensual invasions of people's 
privacy because we believe they are inherently objectionable. We also want to 
create incentives for advertising companies to do the right thing. Of course, 
if you really dislike ads, you can also install a traditional ad blocker.

What about tracking by the sites I actively visit, like NYTimes.com or 
Facebook.com?

The alpha release of Privacy Badger only protects you against tracking by third 
party sites. In the future we plan to add some privacy protections for "first 
party" sites that you actually visit.

We are doing things in this order because the most scandalous, intrusive and 
objectionable form of online tracking is that conducted by companies you've 
often never heard of and have no relationship with. First and foremost, Privacy 
Badger is there to enforce Do Not Track against these domains by providing the 
technical means to restrict access to their tracking scripts and images. The 
right policy for whether nytimes.com, facebook.com or google.com can track you 
when you visit that site – and the technical task of preventing it – is more 
complicated because often (though not always) tracking is interwoven with the 
features the site offers, and sometimes (though not always) users may 
understand that the price of an excellent free tool like Google's search engine 
is measured in privacy, not money.

Does Privacy Badger contain a "black list" of blocked sites?

No, unlike other blocking tools like AdBlock Plus, we have not made decisions 
about which sites to block, but rather about which behavior is objectionable. 
Domains will only be blocked or screened if the Privacy Badger code inside your 
browser actually observes the domain collecting unique identifiers after it was 
sent a Do Not Track message. Privacy Badger does contain a whitelist of some 
sites that are known to provide essential third party resources; those sites 
show up as yellow and have their cookies blocked rather than being blocked 
entirely. This is a compromise with practicality, and in the long term we hope 
to phase out the whitelist as these third parties begin to explicitly commit to 
respecting Do Not Track.

How was the cookie blocking whitelist created?

The initial list of domains that should be cookie blocked rather than blocked 
entirely was derived from a research project on classifying third party domains 
as trackers and non-trackers. We will make occasional adjustments to it as 
necessary. If you find domains that are under- or over-blocked, please file a 
bug on Github.
Does Privacy Badger prevent fingerprinting?

Currently, Privacy Badger does not prevent browser fingerprinting, of the sort 
we demonstrated with the Panopticlick project. But we will be adding 
fingerprinting countermeasures in a future update!

Does Privacy Badger consider every cookie to be a tracking cookie?

No. Privacy Badger analyzes the cookies from each site; unique cookies that 
contain tracking IDs are disallowed, while "low entropy" cookies that perform 
other functions are allowed. For instance a cookie like LANG=fr that encodes 
the user's language preference, or a cookie that preserves a very small amount 
of information about ads the user has been shown, would be allowed provided 
that individual or small groups of users' reading habits could not be collected 
with them. We have a very rough implementation of this; pull requests are 
welcome.

Does Privacy Badger account for a cookie that was used to track me even if I 
deleted it?

Yes.  Privacy Badger keeps track of cookies that could be used to track you and 
where they came from, even if you frequently clear your browser's cookies.  
(But note that in Firefox, Privacy Badger will be automatically deactivated 
when you enter Private Browsing Mode, and reactivated when you return to normal 
browsing.  The same behavior occurs if you set the "Never Remember History" 
option.)

Why does Privacy Badger's icon sometimes not show up in Firefox?

Firefox add-ons need special permission to be active when a user is in Private 
Browsing mode or has chosen "Never remember history" in their privacy settings. 
Privacy Badger Alpha does not request this permission because its blocking 
algorithm uses your browsing history to determine what to block. Therefore, if 
you have one of these privacy settings enabled Privacy Badger will be inactive. 
(A new version that fixes this will be released soon!)

Will you be supporting any other browsers besides Chrome / Firefox?

In the near future we hope to release Privacy Badger for Opera and Firefox 
Mobile.  Unfortunately at the moment we cannot support Safari or Internet 
Explorer, since current versions of those browsers appear to be incompatible 
with how Privacy Badger works at a technical level.  (With that said, if you 
have an idea for how to make Privacy Badger work for Safari or IE, please let 
us know!)

Can I download Privacy Badger outside of the Chrome Web Store?

You can! If you are using an alternative Chromium based browser such as 
Chromium ports Iron, Comodo Dragon, or Maxthon you can get the latest version 
of the addon directly from this link: 

https://www.eff.org/files/privacy_badger-chrome.crx

I am an online advertising / tracking company. How do I stop Privacy Badger 
from blocking me?One way is to stop tracking third party users who have turned 
on the Do Not Track header (i.e., stop collecting cookies, supercookies or 
fingerprints from them). That will work for new Privacy Badger installs.

If copies of Privacy Badger have already blocked your domain, you can unblock 
yourself by promising to respect the Do Not Track header in a way that conforms 
with the user's privacy policy. You can do that by posting a specific compliant 
DNT policy to the URL https://example.com/.well-known/dnt-policy.txt, where 
"example.com" is all of your DNT-compliant domains. Note that the domain must 
support HTTPS, to protect against tampering by network attackers. The path 
contains ".well-known" per RFC 5785.

The Privacy Badger alpha release currently checks for this specific verbatim 
policy document, though in the future Privacy Badger may allow content from 
sites that post different versions of a compliant DNT Policy, and that there 
may be ways for users to specify their own acceptable DNT policies if they wish 
to.

What is the Privacy Badger license? Where is the Privacy Badger source code?

Privacy Badger is GPLv3 code, based on a modified version of the AdBlock Plus 
engine. You can find the Privacy Badger source trees on Github. There is also a 
development mailing list. Privacy Badger is governed by EFF's Privacy Policy 
for Software.

I found a bug! What do I do now?

First, please make sure the bug hasn't already been reported by checking the 
current bug list for Firefox or for Chrome.  If the bug hasn't yet been 
reported you can report the bug here for Privacy Badger for Firefox or here for 
Privacy Badger for Chrome. If you don't have a GitHub account, then you can 
login using the anonymous one: "cypherpunk"/"cypherpunk".

How can I support Privacy Badger?

Thanks for asking! Individual donations make up about half of EFF's support, 
which gives us the freedom to work on user-focused projects. If you want to 
support the development of Privacy Badger and other projects like it, helping 
build a more secure Internet ecosystem, you can throw us a few dollars here. 
Thank you.

How does Privacy Badger handle social media widgets?

Social media widgets (such as the Facebook Like button, Twitter Tweet button, 
or Google +1 button) often track your reading habits. Even if you don't click 
them, the social media companies often see exactly which pages you're seeing 
the widget on. As a result, the Privacy Badger alpha release would often block 
these widgets outright. The Privacy Badger beta includes a new feature imported 
from the ShareMeNot project which is able to replace the widgets with a 
stand-in version, so that you can still see and click them. You will not be 
tracked by these replacements unless you explicitly choose to click them. 
Privacy Badger currently knows how to replace the following widgets if they are 
observed tracking you: AddThis, Facebook, Google, LinkedIn, Pinterest, 
Stumbleupon, and Twitter. (The source code for these replacements is here; pull 
requests are welcome) Note that Privacy Badger will not replace social media 
widgets unless it has blocked the associated tracker. If you're seeing real 
social media widgets, it generally means that Privacy Badger hasn't detected 
tracking from that variant of the widget, or that the site you're looking at 
has implemented its own version of the widget. To avoid confusion, the 
replacement widgets are marked with the Privacy Badger badge next to the 
button. To interact with a replacement widget, simply click on it. Depending on 
the widget, Privacy Badger will either send you directly to the appropriate 
sharing page (for example, to post a tweet) or it will enable and load the real 
social widget (for example, the Facebook Like button, with personalized 
information about how many of your friends have "liked" the page). In the 
second case, you will still need to interact with the real widget to "like" or 
share the page.                                      
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