Difference between revisions of "Cookies"

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===History===
 
===History===
Starting from the entry on [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HTTP_cookie HTTP Cookie in Wikipedia] we find that Lou Montulli of Netscape ported cookies from Unix to the Mosaic browser to enable an e-commerce application that was requested by Vint Cert, inter alia in 1994. The point was to save state on the client computer rather in the browser. While this was not the only solution to create session state between the user (as a client) and the web site (as a server), it proved to be the most flexible. David Kristal at Bell Labs started the standardization process in April 1995{{cit web \ title=tt \ url=}}, the same time Netscape applied for a patent. The IETF issued RFC 2106 in February 1997.
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Starting from the entry on [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HTTP_cookie HTTP Cookie in Wikipedia] we find that Lou Montulli of Netscape ported cookies from Unix to the Mosaic browser to enable an e-commerce application that was requested by Vint Cert, inter alia in 1994. The point was to save state on the client computer rather in the browser. While this was not the only solution to create session state between the user (as a client) and the web site (as a server), it proved to be the most flexible. David Kristal at Bell Labs started the standardization process in April 1995<ref name="kristol">Kristol, David; ''HTTP Cookies: Standards, privacy, and politics'', ACM Transactions on Internet Technology, 1(2), 151–198, 2001 {{DOI|10.1145/502152.502153}} (an expanded version is freely available at [https://arxiv.org/abs/cs.SE/0105018 arXiv:cs/0105018v1 [cs.SE&#93;])</ref>, the same time Netscape applied for a patent. The IETF issued RFC 2106 in February 1997.
  
 
==Problems==
 
==Problems==

Revision as of 12:02, 29 May 2018

Full Title and Meme

Cookies are chunks of data that are placed in a user agent (typically a browser) that allow a web site to maintain continuing of user experience.

The problem with cookies is the power that it gives the web site, or a widget hosted on the web site to track the user.

Context

History

Starting from the entry on HTTP Cookie in Wikipedia we find that Lou Montulli of Netscape ported cookies from Unix to the Mosaic browser to enable an e-commerce application that was requested by Vint Cert, inter alia in 1994. The point was to save state on the client computer rather in the browser. While this was not the only solution to create session state between the user (as a client) and the web site (as a server), it proved to be the most flexible. David Kristal at Bell Labs started the standardization process in April 1995[1], the same time Netscape applied for a patent. The IETF issued RFC 2106 in February 1997.

Problems

Solutions

References

  1. Kristol, David; HTTP Cookies: Standards, privacy, and politics, ACM Transactions on Internet Technology, 1(2), 151–198, 2001 Template:Hide in print{{#if:Template:Hide in print||doi:10.1145/502152.502153}} (an expanded version is freely available at arXiv:cs/0105018v1 [cs.SE])