If you want to play cat and mouse, a good reference for things that work is
http://samy.pl/evercookie/
It's mostly targeted at a single domain stopping users from deleting
cookies, but some of the same things should break cross domain security
too.
I'm not sure that end of web ethics is where we want to go in general but
sleazy is a spectrum and depends on intent so there may be useful
inspiration in it.
Luke
On Tue, Mar 19, 2013 at 12:56 PM, Greg Grossmeier <greg(a)wikimedia.org>wrote;wrote:
<quote name="Seb35"
date="2013-03-19" time="14:38:40 +0100">
Hello,
According to [1] and [2], Firefox 22 (release June 25, 2013) will
change the default third-party cookie policy: a third-party cookie
will be authorized only if there is already a cookie set on the
third-party website.
These two bugs are related to this:
https://bugzilla.wikimedia.org/show_bug.cgi?id=45578
https://bugzilla.wikimedia.org/show_bug.cgi?id=45452
--
| Greg Grossmeier GPG: B2FA 27B1 F7EB D327 6B8E |
| identi.ca: @greg A18D 1138 8E47 FAC8 1C7D |
_______________________________________________
Wikitech-l mailing list
Wikitech-l(a)lists.wikimedia.org
https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/wikitech-l