Ian Hickson wrote: > I don't know of any useful documentation on the subject.
Nor me, not allowing 3rd party cookies is just common sense, when I visit site A I'm not interested in cookies from B. > IP addresses are, by and large, enough to perform pretty > much all the tracking you might want Depends. Using the same small ISP dial-in users could end up with getting similar IPs. If they change ISPs or it's a big ISP their IPs will differ. Static IPs are of course another scenario. > sites can bypass third-party cookie blocking by doing > first-party cookie transactions They'd do a part of that with their own bandwidth. Third party cookies are not only a privacy issue, they are also about bandwidth. > blocking third-party cookies ends up breaking a surprising > number of sites in subtle ways. Their problem. Third party cookies are known to be against the interest of the users. Frank
