Jeremy

http://dev.w3.org/html5/webstorage/#user-tracking and 
http://dev.w3.org/html5/webdatabase/#user-tracking already addresses EXACTLY 
this.  I don't think there's anything to do from a spec standpoint.

It doesn't address it from the end-user perspective . The spec says "There are 
a number of techniques that can be used to mitigate the risk of user tracking", 
thus if nothing is implemented the potential end-user concern remains.

More could be done in the specification by making certain techniques mandatory 
to implement to help users avoid such tracking. Whether that is appropriate or 
would be effective is a decision to be made (or already has been).

It is useful that the issue and potential techniques are mentioned. Maybe at 
some point threats and countermeasures need to be reviewed with the various 
"HTML5" specifications considered together.

regards, Frederick

Frederick Hirsch
Nokia



On Sep 8, 2010, at 5:51 AM, ext Jeremy Orlow wrote:

On Tue, Sep 7, 2010 at 7:51 PM, Nathan Kitchen 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
Hi all.

Stumbled across this article on Ars Technica regarding the abuse of the WebSQL 
spec. I thought I'd share it here for a couple of reasons:

 1.  Someone might want to point out that it's part of the Offline Storage 
Spec, not strictly HTML5.

HTML5 is a buzz word.  Like AJAX or LAMP.  Very few people in this world 
(should) care about precisely what spec something came from.

 1.  Security implications may inform some aspects of the spec.

http://dev.w3.org/html5/webstorage/#user-tracking and 
http://dev.w3.org/html5/webdatabase/#user-tracking already addresses EXACTLY 
this.  I don't think there's anything to do from a spec standpoint.

Article: Advertisers get hands stuck inside HTML5 database cookie jar 
(http://arstechnica.com/apple/news/2010/09/rldguid-tracking-cookies-in-safari-database-form.ars)

Thanks.

Nathan


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