So What's A Cookie For, Anyway?
With all of the rhetoric about cookies, many people don't
understand that these little text files were invented for a
reason. In fact, cookies were created to solve the internet's
equivalent of Alzheimer's disease. You see, web sites do not
remember who they are talking to!
The web was designed to be simple and straightforward. You
(a browser such as Internet Explorer or Netscape) ask for
something from a web server. The web server obediently hands
it to you, then goes off to do something else. This is due to
the original purpose of the web - a vast electronic library!
The web was never designed to support electronic commerce.
It was designed to support reading text. Images, videos,
sounds and commerce was all shoehorned into the structure
later.
Okay, so web servers are forgetful. What exactly does this
mean? The browser asks the web server for an object (a web
page, image, graphic or whatever) and the server obligingly
returns it. The connection to the browser is then closed and
forgotten.
Thus, the next time the browsers makes a request of the web
server, the poor server has no easy way to know that it is the
same as before. As far as the server is concerned, every
single request to do something is a unique request from a
different computer.
This makes any kind of transaction control very difficult.
Think about it for a minute and you'll understand. You enter
your personal information into a screen, which sends you to a
second screen to enter your name and address. If the web
server does not know that you are you, then how in the heck
does it relate the credit card information to your name and
address?
The answer is cookies. To put it very simply, a cookie is
simply a way for the web server to know that you are indeed
you. In the previous example, a cookie would allow the server
to know that the name and address are related to the credit
card number.
How does this work? Well, the server creates a small text
file on your system called a cookie. This text file can only
be referenced by that server, and it contains a simple unique
number which identifies you.
Whenever the server does something it tries to read this
cookie to see if it knows who you are. Thus, when the screen
allowing you to enter your name and address is displayed, the
browser tries to read a cookie, effectively asking "do I know
who you are?". It does the same thing on the credit card entry
screen.
Okay, this all seems harmless enough, doesn't it? So how is
this very harmless and exceptionally useful system abused?
Cookies can be set to last until the browser exits, or they
can be set to expire (be deleted) far into the future. Various
advertising companies actively abuse this feature - and this
has led to the public backlash against cookies.
You see, cookies can be created and read when any object is
loaded from a web server. This includes banners and web bugs
(small graphics designed to help advertisers track who is
looking at their ads).
The advertising companies take advantage of this feature to
set cookies on your computer so they can build up a picture of
what sites you've been looking at. The banners effectively ask
"have I seen this person (computer system) before?" If the
answer is "yes" (a cookie exists), then a notation is made in
your profile on the advertisers computer system.
Believe me, it does not take long for an advertising agency
to build up a very nice understanding of exactly what you do
on the internet. Why do they want to do this? To make more
money, of course.
How does this work? An advertising agency sells eyeballs.
The theory they operate on is simple. The more qualified the
eyeballs, the more likely that banners are to be clicked, and
the more likely that sales are to be made. Thus, if you
typically surf, say, Star Trek sites, you may be interested in
seeing advertisements about Science Fiction movies, and
theoretically you will be more likely to purchase tickets.
Okay, why is this a problem? Do you really want an
advertising agency knowing everything about your web
surfing habits? Do you trust them? Do you think they will keep
this information private?
Or to put it another way, these companies are making money
(lots of money) based upon your eyeballs. They are not sharing
that money with you - in fact, they never even asked your
permission to gather information about you.
As an analogy, suppose you were reading a magazine on a
park bench and someone was hiding in the tree over your head,
recording every page that you looked at in a notebook. How
long would you put up with this behavior?
Thus, the public is simply objecting to the unethical use
of cookies to track their movements through the internet. And
as you can see, a very useful tool has been corrupted by
companies whose motives are suspect, to say the least.
Additional Information
-
Cookies Cookies
(under names like magic cookies, persistent cookies, and
just plain cookies) are basically harmless, but many surfers
are very much afraid of them for various reasons. Companies
like Doubleclick use them to track your surfing habits.
These can be a great way to personalize your experience on a
web site, though, and sometimes a web site simply will not
work.
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HTML tag reference guide - <META http-equiv set-cookie>
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Products
- Cookie Pal Need to manage cookies as you surf the
internet? Then you will not find a better program than
Cookie Pal.
-
The Fear Of
Cookies Afraid of the lowly cookie file. Here's some of
the reasons why you should be.
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