- From: Koen Holtman <koen@win.tue.nl>
- Date: Fri, 25 Aug 1995 13:29:13 +0200 (MET DST)
- To: Shel Kaphan <sjk@amazon.com>
- Cc: bobwyman@medio.com, dmk@allegra.att.com, http-wg%cuckoo.hpl.hp.com@hplb.hpl.hp.com
Shel Kaphan: > [Bob Wyman:] > 2. If you remove the requirement for forwarding of State-Info, you break > the ability of servers to use State-Info for click tracking. This is, > unfortunately, one of the applications that State-Info is supposed to > support. If it wasn't for click tracking, I would whole-heartedly support > your suggestion. > >Hmmm. Bug or feature? Personally I think statefulness is important >enough to support well even if click tracking isn't supported by the >same mechanism. General support for click tracking should be *separated* from stateful dialog support mechanisms like state-info. The reason for this is privacy: a user should have the option of disabling the standard click tracking mechanism for *all* servers, while still being able to choose to engage in a stateful dialog with *some* servers (engaging in a dialog with a server implies allowing that particular server to track clicktrails). Dave proposes an `always do state-info/never do state info' configuration option in browsers which would apply to all servers at once. I don't feel that this is a good enough solution to privacy problems. As a made-up statistic, under Dave's proposal, 90% of users will set their browsers on `always do state-info', because they want to use at least one stateful server on the web. But by doing so, these 90% of users allow 100% of server administrators (not just the administrator of the stateful site the user is interested in) to gather clicktrail statistics by using (abusing) the enabled state-info support in their browsers. 60% of the 90% of users does not care about this, the remaining 30% would have rather had a web protocol that would give better privacy protection. This abuse of stateful dialog support by server administrators to get better statistics without offering a more interesting (stateful) site in return is one of the main issues addressed in my `non-persistent cookie proposal', posted here a some weeks ago. I think I'll be posting a new version of this proposal in the near future, even though Dave's changes to his proposal, and my (non-published) changes to my proposal have made the two much more similar than they were originally. The only differences remaining are privacy protection mechanisms and the requirement that caches always forward state-info. Koen.
Received on Friday, 25 August 1995 04:34:38 UTC