vailr
Diamond Member
Text
Good Cookies?
My comment in the last issue ("Bugs and Beacons: Bah!"
http://www.langa.com/current.htm#3 ) that most Cookies and "Web Bugs"
are actually beneficial brought some interesting mail, too:
Fred: About useful cookies. I'd been visiting buy.com for
months to check their price on Kodak's EasyShare DX3900
digital camera. The price recently fell to under $300. Then, I
deleted buy.com's permanently stored cookie from my hard
drive. When I returned to buy.com, the price of the camera had
shot back up by $50! I let the site place another cookie on my
hard drive & checked the price of the camera again it had
dropped $21 but still was priced about $30 higher than before
I'd deleted that cookie. I had no idea a cookie could be so
valuable to me. --- William G. Laine
One of the most common uses of Cookies is to track "returning visitors"
to a site: Depending on when you were last on a site, and what pages you
visited when you were there, you may be shown custom content that varies
visit to visit. For example, in this case, it appears that the site is
set up to reward returning visitors with an automatic markdown--- a kind
of private sale. Delete the Cookie, and you lose access to the automatic
markdown.
Good Cookies?
My comment in the last issue ("Bugs and Beacons: Bah!"
http://www.langa.com/current.htm#3 ) that most Cookies and "Web Bugs"
are actually beneficial brought some interesting mail, too:
Fred: About useful cookies. I'd been visiting buy.com for
months to check their price on Kodak's EasyShare DX3900
digital camera. The price recently fell to under $300. Then, I
deleted buy.com's permanently stored cookie from my hard
drive. When I returned to buy.com, the price of the camera had
shot back up by $50! I let the site place another cookie on my
hard drive & checked the price of the camera again it had
dropped $21 but still was priced about $30 higher than before
I'd deleted that cookie. I had no idea a cookie could be so
valuable to me. --- William G. Laine
One of the most common uses of Cookies is to track "returning visitors"
to a site: Depending on when you were last on a site, and what pages you
visited when you were there, you may be shown custom content that varies
visit to visit. For example, in this case, it appears that the site is
set up to reward returning visitors with an automatic markdown--- a kind
of private sale. Delete the Cookie, and you lose access to the automatic
markdown.