On 02/09/2017 09:54 AM, Bill Spikowski wrote:
Richard Owlett wrote:
On 02/09/2017 05:55 AM, Bill Spikowski wrote:


Here’s my Seamonkey question. When accessing a Google website, it’s pretty
obvious which Google Account we’re signed in on, and switching accounts is
pretty easy. But many other websites seem aware of what Google Account was used
most recently on that computer but don’t display that information or allow users
to change accounts. For instance, a ‘save to calendar’ button or a ‘save this
location’ button will add an event to Google Calendar or a location to Google
Maps, but the user can’t tell which Google Account is receiving this
information, or how to direct it to a different account. I regularly save
important events to the wrong calendar or the wrong map, not realizing what
happened until I’m out and around and need the information on my phone and can’t
find where it got stored.




I avoid Google.

I used to! But Google Maps has no peer; Google Keep is the best method I've
found for to-do lists, shopping lists, and various notes I sometimes need when
my only connection is through my phone; and Google Calendar, abysmal as it
looks, is a great way to interchange calendar information with decent calendar
software across different OS's.


In "Cookie Acceptance Policy" have you checked "Allow cookies for originating
website only"?

Yes -- should I change that? I don't really understand it . . .



In "Cookie Retention Policy" have you checked "Accept for current session only"?

No, my checkmark is before "Accept cookies normally" -- that may be the default
because I don't understand its significance.

Some of my descriptions confuse rather than clarify.
I suggest:
http://kb.mozillazine.org/Cookies
http://kb.mozillazine.org/User_tracking



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