skulk: To lie or keep in hiding, as for some evil reason. To move or go in a mean, stealthy manner. |
Monday December 6, 1999 WebSkulker
Newsletter |
|||||
Free
subscription to WebSkulker
Free email
you@
Visit home page |
To use the links in this newsletter, you must be connected to the Internet. PC Eudora users: to see this and other html mail properly you must check the box "Use Microsoft's Viewer" in the "Viewing Mail" options.
For jr. skulkers in
California and Oregon, we have yet another MSN rebate offer with the
same wording in the fine print as the two we mentioned in the 11/23/99
and 12/3/99
issues. Please read the MSN article in those issues first for
background, then look at this page about the rebate offers in the
chain of Best Buy stores: Scroll down a little more than halfway to see these offers, and note the special language in both of them about California and Oregon: (1) $400 instant in-store rebate on any complete computer (including notebook); (2) $400 mail-in rebate on computer peripherals such as the purchase of any digital camera, hard drive, memory, monitor, palm-sized PC, printer or scanner. Note: we visited a Best Buy and several of the salespeople didn't know the second offer exists. Ask them to show you their latest ad brochure; you should find this offer in the fine print at the bottom of one of the pages. You need to get a rebate package that contains the CD for subscribing to MSN and the rebate forms. This page has the
location of all Best Buy stores:
http://www.tiac.net/users/smiths/privacy/wbfaq.htm WebSkulker could never understand why people were so
paranoid about the subject of browser cookies. He is starting to
change his mind, thanks to a BBS message he read recently and the
first site above submitted by Jr. Skulker Tristan Tom. In
general, WebSkulker likes cookies because a lot of web sites use them
to remember your identity and the preferences you used last time you
visited the site. It is kind of fun visiting a site that you had
visited months earlier and forgotten all about, but the site remembers
you and calls you by name, shows you your userid, information you
saved last time, etc. WebSkulker didn't consider cookies to be much of a
security threat because they are stored on your machine and can only
be read back by the same site that wrote them to your machine.
Yes, someone looking on your hard disk could see cookies and know some
of the web sites you visited, but this is nothing compared to history
logs maintained by the browsers that can be used to find every
site you visited, not just ones that write cookies. See the
article in our 9/28/99
issue about hiding your tracks and the program you can
download from http://www.fsm.nl/ward.
Note that these logs are on your computer, not on an Internet server
somewhere. Speaking of servers, whether a site writes cookies or not,
its server keeps logs showing the IP address of everyone who
visits. If you have a static IP address -- which you will if you
have a DSL line or cable modem -- then your visits to web sites can be
tracked without needing cookies. So WebSkulker didn't consider cookies to be a privacy
problem because other privacy problems seemed to go in the same
direction and to be far worse. But it turns out that cookies can
indeed be read from a site other than the one you were visiting when
the cookie was written. This is done through a trick involving
pictures on web pages. When you visit a web page with pictures,
the .gif or .jpg files that contain the pictures are usually on the
same web server that is giving you the text of the web page, but this
isn't necessarily so. There are a lot of pictures on web pages
that come in from a different server. Also picture
"files" can really be programs that generate a picture on
the fly. You have no doubt seen counters on web pages where the
digits are obviously pictures, not characters of a font. These
counters are generated by a program, but if you look at the HTML
source code they will be invoked as pictures. The mechanism for
writing and reading cookies to your hard disk can be invoked along
with this type of picture that is created by a program call. Suppose you visit www.aaa.com and it has
an ad banner picture from www.adagency.com. The ad agency
could write a cookie to your hard disk with a unique serial number in
their database. That cookie would show that it was written by
adagency.com, not aaa.com. Then suppose you visit
www.bbb.com which also has an ad banner picture from
www.adagency.com. That picture could allow the adagency.com
server to read the cookie that you got when you visited aaa.com.
The ad agency could see the serial number in that cookie and will know
that you visited aaa.com and bbb.com. They will not know who you
are or anything about you except that they know that the same person
visited those two sites. Remember: if you have a static IP
address than they would know this anyway without needing cookies
because their server logs will show which IP addresses viewed the
banner ads on different sites. The first link above is to an article about how it is
possible to write and read cookies from an HTML-formatted email
message, and how an ad agency could use this technique to correlate a
serial number in their database with your email address. The
second link above shows that similar information about your email can
be gathered from server logs without needing cookies. Download the program here: You
can test Cookie Pal by generating test cookies here:
Jr. Skulker Frank Telles told us about this offer for a free Internet remote control device called "eGoPad" which plugs into a USB port. When you sign up, they will tell you that it won't be available until early 2000. But the world is going to end on 1/1/2000 so you probably won't ever get the device.
This site draws a Monopoly board from a database, so every time you go to the site, the items on the board will be different. The property squares are names of companies that are partly owned by Microsoft. Click on a square to get the details. The MS Monopoly site was submitted by the skulker, not jr. skulker, who runs http://www.midnightskulker.com. Other subscribers have asked not to be called jr. skulkers, but we refused. We are making an exception in this case and will generalize the rule like this: if you want to be a skulker instead of a jr. skulker, you must register and use a domain name that has the word "skulker" somewhere in it.
The Big Bully A little guy was sitting in a bar, drinking, minding his own business when a great big dude comes in and WHACK!! -- knocks him clean off the bar stool and onto the floor. Then he says, "That was a karate chop from Korea."
WebSkulker is a daily newsletter in html format. To
subscribe or unsubscribe, go to our web site at http://www.webskulker.com
or send email to listserv@webskulker.com
with precisely the following: To change your subscription to a new email address, unsubscribe from the old address and then subscribe to the new address. This newsletter is copyrighted 1999 by The WebSkulker. You may use any material in this issue for any reason provided that you attribute it to the WebSkulker Newsletter and include the URL to our web site: http://www.webskulker.com . |