yahoo tracking
they are most certainly not the only ones...
and that 'opt-out' button in question just marks you as a special customer needing special tracking
btw Lycos is monitoring each and every forum that runs on their servers permanently with some sophisticated pattern matchers.
and honestly, I don't find it even funny that my phone supplier provides a mail-box for me - what does my private stuff concern them ?
a good idea to become aware of consequences of networking and telecom
cheers, Tom
<font size=-1>[ This Message was edited by: astroman on 2005-05-17 04:36 ]</font>
and that 'opt-out' button in question just marks you as a special customer needing special tracking

btw Lycos is monitoring each and every forum that runs on their servers permanently with some sophisticated pattern matchers.
and honestly, I don't find it even funny that my phone supplier provides a mail-box for me - what does my private stuff concern them ?
a good idea to become aware of consequences of networking and telecom

cheers, Tom
<font size=-1>[ This Message was edited by: astroman on 2005-05-17 04:36 ]</font>
- ChrisWerner
- Posts: 1738
- Joined: Fri Aug 31, 2001 4:00 pm
- Location: Germany/Bavaria
- Contact:
I wouldn't trust any service's opt-out, since that's only for a specific server.
You could check if there's a national opt-out, like here we have http://opt-out.be/ . That list has legal value here, and can include postal and email adress, phone numbers etc. Everyone sending out commercial emails should check that list and scrap opt-out list from their adressees. Theoretically
you can then sue them if they fail to comply. Problem is that oversees spammers don't read that opt-out list and it's hard to sue them eh, but it seems to work at least for local junkmail.
I think we discussed that before, and the outcome of that was, if I remember well, not to use any of the large services. They /all/ do track you. So I stick to my ISP for email adresses, I have a contract w them and they properly filter or at least tag junkmail, so local rules can be set up for them.
Yes, in a way it's kind of ironic that after Nazi Germany, english speaking countries set up Echelon as a big brother to keep an (automated) eye on things.
_________________
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You could check if there's a national opt-out, like here we have http://opt-out.be/ . That list has legal value here, and can include postal and email adress, phone numbers etc. Everyone sending out commercial emails should check that list and scrap opt-out list from their adressees. Theoretically

I think we discussed that before, and the outcome of that was, if I remember well, not to use any of the large services. They /all/ do track you. So I stick to my ISP for email adresses, I have a contract w them and they properly filter or at least tag junkmail, so local rules can be set up for them.
Yes, in a way it's kind of ironic that after Nazi Germany, english speaking countries set up Echelon as a big brother to keep an (automated) eye on things.
_________________
more has been done with less
- Nestor
- Posts: 6688
- Joined: Tue Mar 27, 2001 4:00 pm
- Location: Fourth Dimension Paradise, Cloud Nine!
Well, after all, what the heck are they going to track? If they want to lose their lives out of my surfing, they can... as long as they don't bother me... There are millions of people surfing the net right now? What are they going to do with such information? I don't think they are capable of even following it.
- BingoTheClowno
- Posts: 1722
- Joined: Wed Nov 12, 2003 4:00 pm
- Location: Chicago
- Contact:
I have edited my hosts file, the easiest and cheapest way so far to block ads in windows, which prevents tracking:
http://www.mvps.org/winhelp2002/hosts.htm
Get here the already modified hosts file with all the add servers:
http://accs-net.com/hosts/get_hosts.html
Read more about the hosts file here:
http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,1759,1649060,00.asp
Check this page about security and anonymity (it is long!):
http://www.epic.org/privacy/tools.html
<font size=-1>[ This Message was edited by: BingoTheClowno on 2005-05-17 11:07 ]</font>
http://www.mvps.org/winhelp2002/hosts.htm
Get here the already modified hosts file with all the add servers:
http://accs-net.com/hosts/get_hosts.html
Read more about the hosts file here:
http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,1759,1649060,00.asp
Check this page about security and anonymity (it is long!):
http://www.epic.org/privacy/tools.html
<font size=-1>[ This Message was edited by: BingoTheClowno on 2005-05-17 11:07 ]</font>
well, I just found a nice example - from the site of german mag (a 'respected' one, btw)On 2005-05-17 09:58, Nestor wrote:
Well, after all, what the heck are they going to track? ...
there's this box on the right side between ads and stock data, titled 'Money & Job' with items:
offers - one click to your dream job
income - do you earn enough ?
calculator - what remains from salary
gas - cheapest station close to your location
car finder etc
not much to comment - they've a session id and evaluate (as one example) who clicked the tax calculator and cheapest gas station - voila, an income profile of visitors ordered by location

they could corelate dream job to real income
preferred car brand etc
that's only the evaluation of one single side box - needless to mention they could (will

of course that's all anonymous, but it would take only one single event to add a real world adress. This mag has the capability (at least for a small group of readers) already built in - they offer payed content.
They most certainly would wildely refuse they ever will, but it's almost effortless to corelate the 2 databases

And who is willing to pay for web content is a highly interesting customer anyway...
you can deliberately reverse the model for the 'subversive' part of the web

cheers, Tom