On Thu, 2004-08-12 at 13:55, Justin Patrin wrote:
> On Thu, 12 Aug 2004 13:43:04 -0700, Robby Russell <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > On Thu, 2004-08-12 at 13:34, Jed R. Brubaker wrote:
> > > Hello all. I am looking to create script will detect the page from which the
> > > user just came so that after they do something on the current page (login)
> > > it will send them back to the page they wanted. I was thinking about
> > > $_SERVER['HTTP_REFERER'], but php.net says:
> > >
> > > 'HTTP_REFERER'
> > >
> > > The address of the page (if any) which referred the user agent to the
> > > current page. This is set by the user agent. Not all user agents will set
> > > this, and some provide the ability to modify HTTP_REFERER as a feature. In
> > > short, it cannot really be trusted.
> > >
> > > Is this a big problem? Is there another technique I could use?
> > >
> > > Thank you all!
> > 
> > If a user takes the time to modify this, should it be a concern? If I
> > don't want you to know where I came from and made sure you didn't know,
> > what else can you possibly do aside from snoop? ;-)
> > 
> > I'd bet that 99.99% of the people who surf the net do not modify this so
> > the exception is very minimal.
> > 
> 
> Except for those with a firewall that blocks this....
> 

Ok, so maybe 97.99% ;-p


-- 
/***************************************
* Robby Russell | Owner.Developer.Geek
* PLANET ARGON  | www.planetargon.com
* Portland, OR  | [EMAIL PROTECTED]
* 503.351.4730  | blog.planetargon.com
* PHP/PostgreSQL Hosting & Development
****************************************/

Attachment: signature.asc
Description: This is a digitally signed message part

Reply via email to