Related topics

Pop-up Ads
One effect is that they're able to show you banners ads you're more likely to click on. Another effect is that they can sell that data. If this doesn't bother you, leave your cookies settings alone. If it does bother you, click the box that makes the browser ask permission before setting cookies.

newsabuse@supernews.com(BertieBunyip removal of.)
Yahoo! automatically receives and records information on our server logs from your browser, including your IP address, Yahoo! cookie information, and the page you request. Yahoo! uses information for the following general purposes: to customize the advertising and content you see, fulfill your requests for products

Cookies
Mike Burgess Microsoft MVP XP Information isn't free if you can't find it! http://members.home.net/winhelp98/ Please post replies to this Newsgroup, email address is invalid Block Ads, Banners, Cookies, Hit Counters, Web Bugs and more http://members.home.net/winhelp98/hosts.htm -- "Snitzle" <snit...@attbi.com>

pop-up ads and denial of service attacks
WEB SITES HAVE long planted bits of code called "cookies" on consumers' hard drives to tailor Internet pages for returning visitors and better target ads. Now, enhanced messages that share the look and feel of Web pages are being used to deliver the same bits of code through e-mail, in many cases without regard for

New ebay and paypal spyware
I had scripting and Java set to ask, ActiveX and Cookies set to no. In addition, I had the clipboard permissions set to ask, only because I wanted to KNOW if a site was .... It also prevents all those distracting banner ads. Some pages use images for navigation, and you may wish to see certain other images.

Fed Up With Annoying POP-UP ADS
But the problem persists for many other Web sites competing for advertising dollars in an environment where the difference between being ranked fourth In addition, they point out that some people delete cookies (user data stored on their Web browser), which allows for one person to be counted as multiple users.

Cookies, Web Bugs & Your Identity
... be able to take DoubleClick or X10 to court, and collect for the trash they toss out without my permission to put anything (including cookies) on my machines. Hopefully, we have gotten past the arsine remarks from the asses out there, so consider the following: While these ads do come up as a result of

policy Gmail
So how can an www.engage.com cookie be sent to a different site? AFAIK Altavista does a similar thing with ad.doubleclick.net banners. .... should respect stated copyright notices, and should cite the sources explicitly; as a courtesy, publications using CPD material should obtain permission from the contributors.

Does Tiny Personal firewall and Zone Alarm (free versions ...
Another thing would be to set your Microsoft VM > Java permissions to Disable Java (for LAN and restricted zone only) and High safety for all other zones. I don't trust ads nor their cookies, so I like to do that. Honestly, if you're using ZA Pro, I'd be calling them and asking them why.

Email Ads
In all cases, we do not sell or rent your personally identifiable information without your express permission. However, we do collect, use and disclose, DoubleClick, Inc. currently displays ads on our site. DoubleClick-delivered ads may initiate cookies that appear to be coming from our site but are actually

Guard Dog info?
Hey, if you're stupid enough to download and install it (or configure your computer to allow anything to be installed without your permission), you need this. internet explorer 6 has privacy controls which you can manually configure to block 3rd party (ie ads) sites from using cookies, what more do you need?

well you did ask
Let us take ad.doubleclick.net. They put ads up on 3 different web pages, Ad servers can read only cookies placed by the ad server. Muliple sites using the same ad server only allows same ad server access to cookies from said ad server. Your original comment... Cookies are a security issue: by allowing the website

OT - A New Low for Web Advertisers: Pop-Up Downloads
She was hither cast in the cookie that everything that skiped to perform was displayed. Oh pose hopefully!" *free swingers ads* cried. "it was there a free swingers ads, we had ratio preserveing permission. Now the coil in my bottom was a energetic more lusty cosmetology he reared the temptation roars deeper,

what's Gillian doing now?
It does occasionally get annoying constantly yes or no-ing the permissions, but as I said, if I plan to use the site often, I put it in an automatic yes zone (or It is entirely different with cookies, however. I don't even prompt for them, because many (if not most) of them are doubleclick.com or something

DoubleClick Looks to Regain Surfers' Trust
... porn ads and other non-relevant postings? are there no moderators here? is it because anyone can just join and post? we should move to www.smartpockets.com . more cookies !! at least none that you can't eat sas...@duckhead.unx.sas.com (Tom Wilson) wrote in message news:<c3unjc$gv...@license1.unx.sas.com>.

(more) firewall advice please?
It makes no difference to me WHAT it says on those ads, I hate all of them! Cookies are useful, they make sites open faster. Does that mean I have permission to call you up sometime? I just might, you know . . . but I'll leave the heavy breathing to the lurkers LOL )))) Eve.

[RANT] WebTV uses cookies to block browsers
If a cookie can stop the X10 web camera ads from opening a new window for 30 days at a time, that should be reason enough to allow cookies. jack "Mike" Does that include session cookies? That'll screw up quite a few sites. Remember, many sites are applications, so just think of the permissions you give a local

Spyware tracking people (was....a different thread)
Cookies, javascript, hookers that steal personal information, plugins that surreptitiously "call home" with information from my computer, pop-up ads, vbs and active-x applets that do things to my files without asking my permission, they are VERBOTEN! I don't give a damn where "content providers" get their income

more cookie problems
I trust my anti- virus and firewall utilities to stop any real nasties, and ad-aware to clear out any stuff I really don't want. The Opera browser is set to ask me for permission before accepting any cookies - and it's remarkable how often the cookies offered are actually trying to use an 'invalid path' or some

Pop-up Ads
My paranoid browsing setup (no cookies, no scripting languages) prevents me from looking to see where that link goes, but I'm confident that it doesn't go to ask about (MUSH) code questions" sentence; 'online' in a "how I determined if a given MUD/MUSH has permission from Anne McCaffrey to operate" paragraph;