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Opera to Stop Spoofing User Agent as IE

Anonymous reader writes "The Opera browser will stop spoofing its User Agent (UA) as Internet Explorer. Currently Opera, by default, spoofs its UA to identify itself as Internet Explorer. This is seen, by some, as a move that will bring up Opera's usage stats a bit higher, and will hopefully make webmasters, who develop IE centric sites, more aware of Opera."

3 of 360 comments (clear)

  1. It's about darn time, but not really... by Sr.+Pato · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Opera has the option to identify itself as Opera, Mozilla, and IE. IE is by default, for some reason which I don't know (anyone care to explain?) why. Anyone using Opera would probably already be savvy enough to change those settings if they wanted too. But some people are just too lazy, and since there's no real benefit to it, they just leave it as is.
    Expect IE's market share to drop a bit, and for Opera's to go up. :-) Not significantly though, but it's a step in the right direction.
    It's useful, but there's no reason why someone else's browser should be set by default. Don't know, I just never really understood why they did that to begin with.

    All-in-all, my point was, that although this is a good thing for the numbers, it's not something largely significant.

    --
    Nobody's gay for Mole-Man. :-(
  2. Re:A better idea... by QuietLagoon · · Score: 4, Interesting
    Hopefully there aren't so many sites that will screw the browser over.

    www.cvs.com is one of the more major sites that block Opera. You receive an error page stating, "At this time, our site does not support the Opera browser. We hope to remedy this in the near future.".

    If you write to the webmaster about it, you receive a canned reply that says they are planning to have Opera support very soon. Unfortunately, cvs.com has been giving that same canned reply for about four years.

  3. Re:Screwed both ways by Linus+Torvaalds · · Score: 4, Interesting

    It's irrelevant for the usage stats anyway. HTTP logs are a completely unreliable way of measuring browser usage.

    Example: if they change their browser to violate the HTTP protocol when hitting the back button, so that it does the same thing as Internet Explorer does, then they will show up in logs a lot more. Now how does that equate to higher usage? It doesn't. But the stupid people who think you can measure browser usage by looking at logs will think that a load of people have suddenly switched to Opera.

    Observing HTTP traffic is so unreliable, you might as well make up market share statistics. Ignore people who think they can tell you how popular a browser is without conducting a proper survey.