Slashdot Mirror


DoubleClick Workaround: IDcide

No cookies with offsite GIFs: that's the privacy solution implemented by IDcide (take a moment to register the pun, OK, there ya go). Here's technical background on offsite cookies; here's the CNNstory; here's the software FAQ (it's only available for Windows/MSIE). If you're not sure why offsite cookies matter, you must read this. And, not to rain on IDcide's revenue model -- their product does other stuff too -- but why isn't offsite cookie rejection built into all browsers? Anyone from Mozilla want to talk about this?

11 of 241 comments (clear)

  1. What's going on with IDcide? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4

    I noticed that after I installed IDcide, all of the new cookies I receive are for the ".qbots.com" domain.

    For example, I previously had a cookie for "moviefone.com" which contained my zip code. Now I have one for "moviefone.com.role1.jar.qbots.com" which seems to have some additional information it it.

    qbots.com is owned by IDcide (just go to www.qbots.com).

    Maybe I'm just being paranoid...

  2. Mozilla From the mouth of a developer. by jelwell · · Score: 4

    Mozilla has a lot of really nice features as far as cookies are concerned. First of all YES Mozilla has a checkbox to only "Accept cookies that get sent back to the originating server only". (Get this: There is an image checkbox that does the same thing! Which blocks images (read ads) from servers that aren't the originating server)

    Not only does it slice and dice, Mozilla allows you to view your stored cookies - and delete them wholesale or individually.

    You can also ad whole domains that you would like to block images from. And, although the interface isn't quite complete, you can ad domains that you will <b>always</B> block cookies from too. One post I saw wanted the ability to view cookies and delete them real time in the sidebar. It would be trivially easy to skin a new Mozilla that has the Cookie Manager window in the sidebar so that you could actively watch cookies and delete them in real time.

    Joseph Elwell.

    <A HREF="http://www.mozilla.org">Make it better.</A>

  3. Has anyone looked at the latest Opera Win32 beta? by pen · · Score: 4
    Opera 4.0 for Win32 has such features already. You can reject all cookies, ask it to prompt you, or reject all. You can also set it to reject all cookies from a specified server. Not only that, but you can set it to reject all "foreign" cookies - ones that are included with things other than the page, such as images.

    It also notifies you of invalid cookies being set and why they're invalid. I tried using Hotmail and Opera reported 4 or 5 invalid cookies.

    And if that's not enough, you can always turn to the Internet Junkbuster for the ultimate filtering solution.

    --

  4. That's not what it says, nor what it does... by Otto · · Score: 4

    Hmm. Well. Nope, it doesn't.

    Okay. I didn't know what to believe, so I tried a little test. I don't normally use netscape anyway, but I do have it installed.

    I killed the cookie text file. Just deleted it. Start up Netscape (blank home page), so no cookies yet. Change the setting in the preferences. This is Communicator 4.6 for Windows, BTW. Go to a page I know had a doubleclick banner: http://www.userfriendly.org/static/
    Look again, voila, a cookie file. Open it up: There's the doubleclick cookie all right.

    They may have changed the behavior in later versions, I dunno. But the behavior I see is exactly what the option says. Allow cookies that get sent back only to originating server. The cookie originated at doubleclick.net, NOT at userfriendly.org.

    A cookie is not set in HTML, it's set in the HTTP headers. You get those headers with every single web request, be it GIF or HTML.

    The option they NEED, and the one I described, is simple: Only accept cookies originating from the same server as the page being viewed. Or perhaps, disallow cookies with non-HTML files. I can't think of any good reason, other than ads, to send a cookie with a graphic image.

    ---

    --
    - Give a man a fire and he's warm for a day, but set him on fire and he's warm for the rest of his life.
  5. Free protection against *all* bad cookies by ottffssent · · Score: 4

    First, edit your cookies file and take out all the cookies you don't want.

    Second, copy the cookies file somewhere else.

    Third, write a script, batch file, etc. to copy the copied cookies.txt into your browser's directory before you run your browser.

    Fourth, if you find a site thta gives you a cookie you want, copy that line to the cookies.txt file that gets copied over.


    That way, while you *do* get cookies, and they *do* get set and sent back to whatever site, every time you open up your browser, you effectively become a new person since there's no cookie to track you between sessions anymore.

  6. My method (for IE) by kaphka · · Score: 4

    I post this every time there's a cookie article, and it's probably redundant, but it might help some people...

    I set my "Internet Zone" security settings to prompt before accepting cookies. Whenever somebody tries to send me a cookie, the cookie dialog comes up. If it's coming from the site that I'm actually visiting, I accept it (and I never have to see it again.) If it's coming from doubleclick.net or the like, I refuse it, and then I add that domain to the "Restricted Zone". From then on, IE automatically refuses cookies from that domain (and also disables Javascript, ActiveX, etc.)

    My only complaint is that adding the domain to my "restricted" list is a separate step; it would be nice if I could just click "No, and block all future cookies," and be done with it. But if you're using IE anyway, and you don't want to mess with third party programs, this method works pretty well.

    --

    MSK

  7. Give us built-in cookie-management tools! by P_Simm · · Score: 4
    Something I'd LOVE to see in Mozilla (and I'd even consider using IE if they were the first to do this) :

    Have a small text sidebar or window that displays changes to cookies AS THEY HAPPEN, and allow us to delete these cookies from this interface. This could be a small, simple text window built in to, say, the button bar. A small floating independant text box would work well too. The key here is, it's small and out of the way so that we can have it on WHILE we browse, and it gives us dynamic information on our cookies which we can intelligently control.

    Of course this would NOT be on by default, since the average user would just mess up their web-based email cookies and complain. But give us advanced users something to work with here.

    --

    You know what to do with the HELLO.
    Help create an open-source world ...

  8. A simple lightweight solution to dblClick by TomV · · Score: 4

    From HOSTS...

    127.0.0.1 ad.doubleclick.net #spamfilter
    127.0.0.1 m.doubleclick.net #spamfilter
    127.0.0.1 ad.webprovider.com #spamfilter
    127.0.0.1 image.linkexchange.com #spamfilter
    127.0.0.1 jeeves.flycast.com #spamfilter
    127.0.0.1 www.flycast.com #spamfilter
    127.0.0.1 www.burstmedia.com #spamfilter
    127.0.0.1 www.247media.com #spamfilter
    127.0.0.1 www.ad-venture.com #spamfilter
    127.0.0.1 www.adauction.com #spamfilter
    127.0.0.1 www.adsdaq.com #spamfilter
    127.0.0.1 a32.g.a.yimg.com #spamfilter YahooAds
    127.0.0.1 www.pagecount.com #spamfilter
    127.0.0.1 www1.pagecount.com #spamfilter
    127.0.0.1 www2.pagecount.com #spamfilter
    127.0.0.1 www3.pagecount.com #spamfilter
    127.0.0.1 www4.pagecount.com #spamfilter
    127.0.0.1 ad.linkexchange.com.com #spamfilter
    127.0.0.1 www.smartclicks.com #spamfilter
    127.0.0.1 mojofarm.mediaplex.com #spamfilter
    127.0.0.1 www.etour.com #spamfilter ads in GetRight

    ____________
    TomV

  9. Why stop there. Compound this with "smart houses" by Colvin+Burgess · · Score: 4

    In Australia there are pilot projects where utility companies (Electricty, water, gas) have the capacity to backchannel data via their metering devices. This back channel could also be used for TV ratings, satellite downlinks (for Internet Access), security system monitoring and much more. Add FlyBuys to this. So, not only would your favourite TV shows, Internet sites would be known, the times you are home, when you are most likely to be sitting on the toilet, etc. can also be inferred by compiling the information fed back thorugh such a back channel. It will not be long before many databases are amalgamated - FlyBuys, Debt Collection, TV Ratings, Personal Information ,etc. Think of the possibilities then.

    --
    C.Burgess - email:colvinb@airnet.com.au
  10. Better solution - Junkbuster by Booker · · Score: 5
    I've been using Junkbuster for quite a while now. It's awesome, and it's free.

    ---

  11. From passive resistance to Active Disruption by bifurcator · · Score: 5

    Why not go one step further? If companies like DoubleClick want to collect information on you through cookies, let them.

    One thing I imagine you could is actively contaminate the personal information that they are managing to collect on you. How would you do that? You could set up a shared cookie repository somewhere on the web. Everytime a banner network plants a cookie on your machine, you could submit it to the repository. Everytime you are about to send a cookie back to the same banner network, you would get grab someone else's cookie from the repository and send it to the unsuspecting banner ad server.

    To reiterate, if you were to send your Aunt Susie's cookie to DoubleClick everytime their banner ad displays on your page, you would contaminate Aunt Susie's personal profile in the DoubleClick database.

    If a lot of people were to cooperate in this way, they could render their personal profiles totally useless to advertisers, because the signal to noise ratio would be very low.