Check your browser · How to disable cookies · Further protection · (Free Cookie Management Software) · (Web Bugs) · (Cookie Links)
Imagine that your remote control informed stations the second you switched to them, and that they could sell this information to their advertisers to help them decide what junk mail to send you.
Would you want to be pushing buttons on a remote that could tell an insurance company to phone you while you're watching a program about financial planning? Well, your mouse and browser are now giving them exactly that power, except that instead of just the channel number, they are getting the exact URLs of the Web pages you look at.
We want you to know how they can identify you individually and how you can protect your identity from being discovered and sold. Don't let them use your browser as a tool of surveillance. Stop them now.
Your browser is probably revealing more than you might want: which computer you are coming from, what software and hardware you are using, details of the link you clicked on, and possibly even your email address. For specifics on your browser click on our demonstration page.
If your ISP is running an identd demon, or if you leave certain IRC clients running while you surf, servers can ask for your identity at the time your browser requests a page. Try our test to see whether this is happening to you. Some firewalls (rightly) block these requests, so if the browser goes silent just interrupt the transfer request with the stop button. If you're running an IRC client you may find the disclosure stops when you turn it off; see instructions below.
All they may need is your email address
because various
databases
let them look up your name and address from it.
Many organizations use ``cookies'' to track your every move on their site. A cookie is a unique identifier that a web server places on your computer: a serial number for you personally that can be used to retrieve your records from their databases. It's usually a string of random-looking letters long enough to be unique. They are kept in a file called cookies or cookies.txt or MagicCookie in your browser directory/folder. They are also known as ``persistent cookies'' because they may last for years, even if you change ISP or upgrade your browser.
If you look at your cookies file you may see the names of web sites that you have never heard of. They were probably put there by companies that resell advertising space from a large number of popular sites. Those ad placement companies maintain huge databases recording details of who looks at which pages. The larger ones have cookies in place on millions of peoples' browsers. If you use one of the popular search engines, the queries you type are probably being logged and analyzed too. We wonder whether some companies are selling your identity as part of the package.
Any web site that knows your identity and has cookie for you could set up procedures to exchange their data with the companies that buy advertising space from them, synchronizing the cookies they both have on your computer. This possibility means that once your identity becomes known to a single company listed in your cookies file, any of the others might know who you are every time you visit their sites.
The result is that a web site about gardening that you never told your name could sell not only your name to mail-order companies, but also the fact that you spent a lot of time one Saturday night last June reading about how to fertilize roses. More disturbing scenarios along the same lines could be imagined.
There are of course many beneficial and legitimate uses for cookies, as Netscape explains. They also allow ``mass customization'' of the content on web sites. But it's not generally possible to tell from looking at a cookie alone how it will be used. Because of the possibilities of misuse we recommend stopping cookies except for sites where you really need them.
A
cookie management package
is the best first line of defense.
You can also tell your browser that you don't want cookies,
or to alert attempts to place a cookie.
(Or if you use your
cookie management software
to accept cookies selectively,
tell your browser to warn you before accepting cookies.)
If you're using a major browser numbered below 4.0
it probably only gives you the option to
refuse each cookie at the time it is pushed at you:
you have to
keep saying no
every time.
Your browser may be different: it may not support cookies, or it may not allow you to stop them. Even if it does, you may have to click on cancel each time a web site wants to push a cookie on you. (Some set several per page.)
One method that works with some browsers (such as Netscape) is making the cookies file read-only (right click, choose properties) or creating a directory of that name. (On Macs, remove the MagicCookie file and create an empty folder of the same name.) However, any browser could cache cookies even when it can't write them to a file. If you remove the file your browser will probably just quietly make a new one. Some people use a batch file to delete the file on start-up.
We have had
reports
of the following
undocumented
methods for stopping
cookies permanently under Windows, but haven't tried them ourselves.
We also recommend disabling Microsoft ActiveX, Visual Basic Script (VBS, also humorously known to security experts as Virus Building System) , Java and JavaScript, due to the large number of serious security loopholes they have opened, and because they provide servers with another way to get Referer and other information. (Disabling Java also stops many pop-up ads and interstitials.) On Netscape 2.0, look under Options, then Security. On Netscape 3.0, look under Options, Network, then Languages. On Netscape Communicator 4.02, select Edit, Preferences, Advanced then deselect Enable Java and JavaScript.
Microsoft publishes instructions on how to disable active scripting. [FAQ] [NICP Assessment]
Our instructions for disabling ActiveX were taken from a single version of Windows; please tell us appropriate instructions if your version differs. Under the Windows Start menu and select Settings | Control Panel command; in the Control Panel window double click on Internet Options icon; in the Internet Properties window click on the Security tab in the Security panel: Click on the Internet icon; Click on the Custom Level... button; Scroll down to the entry for Run ActiveX controls and plug-ins and click on Disable; OK; OK.
Be sure to the following options are not checked: Send email address as anonymous FTP password and Enable Autoinstall.) They are in Netscape 4.X in the panel above. If you know the procedures for other browsers, please tell us. To check whether your email address is being given away, visit any FTP site such as ftp://ftp.funet.fi/ that displays the login name given by your browser. It should be UNKNOWN if your browser is configured correctly.
On Netscape 4.06 and above, we recommend disabling the What's Related feature.
MS IE-4.0 allows servers to determine the URLs you view at their site even if accessed from cache or through a proxy. To disable this, try: View, Internet Options, Advanced, clear the check-box beside Enable page hit counting. Or get another browser.
We're told by a user of the
IRC
client mIRC
that the following lines will disable
identd
when it's not needed by the client.
on 1:start: .identd on
on 1:disconnect: .identd on
on 1:connect: .identd off
The lines are placed
in the
under
remotes
in the mIRC editor.
If you have any experiences or advice on this, please
tell us.
The Internet isn't an easy place to keep your privacy,
but a
few
Web sites help.
Our services follow the principle that information about people should be made visible to those people and be approved by them. And we don't push cookies.
Home · Next · Site Map · Legal · Privacy · Cookies · Banner Ads · Telemarketing · Mail · Spam · Opt OutCopyright © 1996-2005 Guidescope Inc ®. Copying and distribution permitted under the GNU General Public License. 2005/01/15 http://www.junkbusters.com/cookies.html