Your take on Do Not Track
Posted: Sun Sep 09, 2012 10:27 pm
What's your stance on DNT?
See: http://www.webmonkey.com/2012/09/apache ... -settings/
"When IE 10 is officially released, DNT will be supported by all the major web browsers (except Google Chrome)"
I'm guessing that no DNT code will be included in Chromium, so you would need to build this yourself? Possibility of this happening... or are you of the mindset that DNT is useless since the web server must also support and respect the setting?
Not sure that I fully get why we need another setting (DNT) ...isn't turning off Cookies except for the domains you trust the same/better thing?
See: http://www.webmonkey.com/2012/09/apache ... -settings/
"When IE 10 is officially released, DNT will be supported by all the major web browsers (except Google Chrome)"
I'm guessing that no DNT code will be included in Chromium, so you would need to build this yourself? Possibility of this happening... or are you of the mindset that DNT is useless since the web server must also support and respect the setting?
Not sure that I fully get why we need another setting (DNT) ...isn't turning off Cookies except for the domains you trust the same/better thing?