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View Full Version : 2+2 tracking cookie


Charon
12-18-2004, 08:57 AM
everytime i go to 2+2, i get an alert from my antispyware program, telling me i got a tracking cookie. anyone else have this? what does it exactly do?

thanks

Izaak_Walton
12-18-2004, 01:05 PM
It sends 2+2 management info on your credit card and bank account so that whenever they release a new book, they automatically send it to you and charge your card. /images/graemlins/grin.gif

Seriously, I think it just logs you in automatically. If it does anything else, I'd like to know--I have enough books already!!!!

TylerD
12-18-2004, 01:13 PM
If you look under "My Home" and "Maintenance" it tells you what cookies this site stores.

Izaak_Walton
12-18-2004, 01:22 PM
Went and looked; and yes, it does answer all my questions. I mean, everybody knows what 28376gd364855dscg432shejun3m means, right? /images/graemlins/grin.gif

GrannyMae
12-18-2004, 01:26 PM
28376gd364855dscg432shejun3m

this is chuck's swiss bank account number.

how did that get there??

http://smilies.sofrayt.com/%5E/b0/deal.gif

BradleyT
12-18-2004, 02:13 PM
Cookies are harmless text files. If you go to any site that has a login/password page with a "Remember me" or "Log me in on each visit" the website uses cookies to store your information. It probably also stores information such as the date and time of your last visit so that the forum can show you which threads have been updated since your last visit.

Sensitive data should never be stored in cookies but it's really up to the website creator to impliment that. For example on the e-commerce sites I write that interact with Authorize.net for credit card payments I don't store credit card information in a cookie, in the database, or in computer (webserver) memory. I create a user object that contains all the user details, send that to Authorize.Net, get a response (valid charge/invalid charge) and then delete the user information from memory. For most websites there's absolutely no reason they should be storing your credit card on file unless they have tight security measures in place and it's a place where you'll frequently make transactions.