FirstThirdPartyDetection
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=== Working Definitions === | === Working Definitions === | ||
| - | * 1st party: The site that the user visits directly (e.g. by typing the URL) | + | * 1st party: The site that the user visits directly (e.g. by typing the URL, bookmarks, following a link, etc) |
* associated parties: Other sites (with different URLs) that may be exempted. E.g. co-branded sites such as lotus.com that belongings to IBM (and may be run on same or different infrastructure) | * associated parties: Other sites (with different URLs) that may be exempted. E.g. co-branded sites such as lotus.com that belongings to IBM (and may be run on same or different infrastructure) | ||
* 3rd parties: All other sites | * 3rd parties: All other sites | ||
| - | |||
=== Goals === | === Goals === | ||
Revision as of 22:07, 21 October 2011
Contents |
W3C DNT Scratchpad for ISSUE-60
2011-10-13 M. Schunter (IBM, Editor)
Contributors
Working Definitions
- 1st party: The site that the user visits directly (e.g. by typing the URL, bookmarks, following a link, etc)
- associated parties: Other sites (with different URLs) that may be exempted. E.g. co-branded sites such as lotus.com that belongings to IBM (and may be run on same or different infrastructure)
- 3rd parties: All other sites
Goals
- How can a site tell in what category it is (wrt a request).
Criteria
- Simplicity
- Ease to implement
- General applicability
Options / Alternative Solutions
- Referrer?
