My apologies for the confusion: I did indeed mean the Safari extension incognito that Adam linked to, and not a "mode."
Alexey brought up this extension earlier in the thread as an example of a use of beforeload that should be permitted. - Gavin On Jan 20, 2011 8:55 PM, "Darin Adler" <da...@apple.com> wrote: > On Jan 20, 2011, at 5:52 PM, Gavin Peters (蓋文彼德斯) wrote: > >> [2] I just installed Incognito mode in a local Safari, and sniffed it. I can confirm requests to blocked domains go straight through; with cookies, everything. The only place you won't see them is in the document, the DOM & the Safari resource loading view. So Incognito mode doesn't really stop tracking right now! > > Safari doesn’t have Incognito mode, so I’m not sure what you’re talking about here. > > If it’s Private Browsing you are referring to, then yes, that feature doesn’t even try to stop tracking. > > -- Darin >
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