- From: <jeff@customerparadigm.com>
- Date: Thu, 10 May 2012 00:29:12 +0000
- To: Markus Hartmann <hartmann-m@celanio.com>, "www-p3p-policy@w3.org" <www-p3p-policy@w3.org>
Markus - Although there isn't a lot of active support of P3P Privacy Policies these days, you would publish both a p3p privacy policy in an XML-type format on your website for visitors' browsers to detect and read, and you can publish a simplified P3P compact policy that is embedded in the header information of your server, so that compatible browsers (IE 6.0) can detect and use that to help determine if you would like to accept first and third party cookies. Thanks, -- Jeff Jeff Finkelstein Customer Paradigm 303.473.4400 mailto:Jeff@customerparadigm.com Magento Developers: http://www.CustomerParadigm.com/Magento/ On 5/8/12 2:25 AM, "Markus Hartmann" <hartmann-m@celanio.com> wrote: >Hello everyone, > >We need for a customer a P3P Policy, but we are not sure to whom it has >to be issued. > >We are a service provider for a web based event-management software. >With this software a customer can realize events, starting with planning >events through to write invoices, creating statistics etc. Also all >content of the website provided by us, is created and administrated from >our customer. > >Customers of our Customer can participate on such events, if they >register themselves for it via a web-based form with personal data, >similar to a web shop and therefore we need a P3P Policy. > >Our Customer has the opinion, that the Policy has to be issued to >ourselves, because we store the data and provide the software. > >We think differently, because our customer ascertains and works with >data from customers of himself. > >So to whom we have to issue the Policy? > >TIA >Markus Hartmann > >
Received on Thursday, 10 May 2012 00:29:43 UTC