- From: James Hawkins <jhawkins@google.com>
- Date: Fri, 3 Aug 2012 10:36:09 -0700
- To: Aryeh Gregor <ayg@aryeh.name>
- Cc: whatwg <whatwg@whatwg.org>, Ian Hickson <ian@hixie.ch>
On Fri, Aug 3, 2012 at 5:31 AM, Aryeh Gregor <ayg@aryeh.name> wrote: > On Thu, Aug 2, 2012 at 9:42 PM, Ian Hickson <ian@hixie.ch> wrote: > > On Thu, 26 Jul 2012, Smylers wrote: > >> Ian Hickson writes: > >> > > Also, I do not understand why we have credit cards types. Is anyone > >> > > willing to have his credit cards information saved locally? > >> > > >> > Sure, why not? > >> > >> I am too, but I can understand why people who share their computer (and > >> user accounts) with others wouldn't want their card numbers saving. > > > > That's a UA configuration issue, presumably. (Similar to saving > > passwords.) > > In fact, Chrome already autodetects credit card numbers for autofill > (presumably based on a heuristic) and has a special dialog for whether > to remember them, similar to the password-remembering dialog. At > <chrome://chrome/settings/autofill>, there are fields for both > addresses and credit card numbers. This is documented here: > < > https://support.google.com/chrome/bin/answer.py?hl=en&answer=142893&p=settings_autofill > > > IIRC, one option when it asks you to remember credit cards is "don't > ever remember credit card numbers" -- although I'm not sure, since I > think I picked it and thus haven't seen the dialog in a long time. :) > In practice the credit card portion of Chrome Autofill is not very useful since most (hand-wavy) sites that contain credit card fields in forms use autocomplete=off, which Chrome respects. There is a third-party Chrome extension which removes autocomplete=off to solve this issue. James
Received on Friday, 3 August 2012 17:37:10 UTC