View Full Version : Persistent Cookie and Web Bugs Used On Official US Websites


Raven
01-01-06, 01:33 AM
Privacy slip on official US sites

Official rules stop federal websites tracking visitors
The White House and National Security Agency have been caught tracking visitors to their websites in ways that may violate official US guidelines.
The organisations have been using different techniques to spot return visitors and monitor what they are looking at.

Although widely used on commercial websites, US federal guidelines prohibit official use of such tools.

Cyber rights activists said cookies could be used to track surfing habits.

Code violation

News agency Associated Press broke the story about the NSA's use of so-called "persistent cookies" to log who visits its website.

Cookies are small text files placed on users' computers when they visit a website. They are usually used to record preferences, such as native language, so the next time that user visits the page they see it in the tongue they usually speak.

Federal rules do allow government agencies to use session cookies that exist only as long as a visit to a particular website. Many online stores use them to remember the contents of a visitor's virtual shopping trolley.

However, persistent cookies that are never deleted are prohibited following guidelines first issued in 2000 and subsequently updated in 2003 by the White House's Office of Management and Budget.

The persistent cookies used by the NSA expire in 2035.

A spokesman for the NSA said a software upgrade had inadvertently left it using persistent cookies. It has now stopped using this sort of text file.

At the same time the White House website was found to be using a combination of cookies and tiny image files known as web bugs to track users.

The combination of cookies and web bugs are typically used to identify repeat visitors or track them as they move around the net.

Web bugs are not specifically prohibited by the rules on monitoring visitors to official websites.

The web bugs were reportedly used by net firm WebTrends which oversees the White House site. A spokesman for the company said it did not use the information generated by the web bugs and cookies to track users or spot repeat visitors.

A White House spokesman said it would investigate to find out if the combination of web bugs and cookies broke official guidelines.

leopold
01-01-06, 01:39 AM
the government is barred from something like that while sciforums and others continue.
real intelligent
another typical example of the government being criminalized.
i wonder who dreamed that up, the ACLU?

edit
this isn't a slap at sciforums, it's the only site that i know for a fact that uses cookies.

Neildo
01-01-06, 03:44 AM
Um, this isn't about normal cookies, it's about ones that track where you surf after you leave the site. You know, the kind we use anti-virus and spyware to get rid of?

- N

Happeh
01-01-06, 06:28 AM
Don't mind leopold. He doesn't think too good.

leopold
01-01-06, 09:14 PM
neildo
oh i see,
then i agree
nobody has a right to know what sites i visit and about that
you can wipe out your cookies by:
clicking start
select run
type in cookies
on the view menu select select all
press control and click on index.dat to deselect it
and then clicking on delete

Neildo
01-02-06, 02:12 AM
oh i see,
then i agree
nobody has a right to know what sites i visit and about that

What, do you have something to hide? [insert other stupid questions and other assumptions here to justify these cookies]

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leopold
01-02-06, 03:07 AM
not really. i do not use spyware nor have i ever deleted my cookies.
if the government wants to know, well i can send them my cookies to save them the trouble.i have other ways of dealing with stuff like that.