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by stingraycharles
4142 days ago
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As someone who has built and exited an adserving SaaS in the past, I get asked this question almost never -- the advertisers that spend the most money never want to abuse the law. The same goes for the SuperCookie; everyone knows the technology exists, but it's only the rotten apples in the industry ruining it for everyone else by actually making use of it. I got asked whether we would support this a few times, but it was always asked by the most shadiest of our customers, and a simple "we want to listen to the visitor's intent" sufficed. The only real risk I see for online privacy is that this sort of stuff will happen en-masse and there will be a powerful lobby to illegalize this behaviour. |
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I wonder if a solution would be to tie third party cookies to the parent page. So that by default a Facebook cookie on a Guardian page could only be retrieved when the user is on the Guardian website. You could then have options within ther browser to explicitly allow cross domain cookies if the user wants (and send the actual Facebook domain cookie).