1998-01-25 - Re: Tossing your cookies [Re: Why no “Banner Ad Eaters”?]

Header Data

From: dlv@bwalk.dm.com (Dr.Dimitri Vulis KOTM)
To: cypherpunks@toad.com
Message Hash: 116adb06ec5ba01bf3d8c4154b760339df4907914a446520ec764d0a36188abf
Message ID: <1yiVJe59w165w@bwalk.dm.com>
Reply To: <34CB736A.CC97CCEF@acm.org>
UTC Datetime: 1998-01-25 18:32:26 UTC
Raw Date: Mon, 26 Jan 1998 02:32:26 +0800

Raw message

From: dlv@bwalk.dm.com (Dr.Dimitri Vulis KOTM)
Date: Mon, 26 Jan 1998 02:32:26 +0800
To: cypherpunks@toad.com
Subject: Re: Tossing your cookies [Re: Why no "Banner Ad Eaters"?]
In-Reply-To: <34CB736A.CC97CCEF@acm.org>
Message-ID: <1yiVJe59w165w@bwalk.dm.com>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain



Jim Gillogly <jim@acm.org> writes:

> Heinz-Juergen Keller skribis:
> > Just a silly? question on cookies:
> > What will happen if I just link cookies.txt to /dev/null ?
> > Is there anything speaking against this solution?
>
> Works fine on Unix and Linux systems if you're not a cookie fan:
> the remote sites think you've eaten their cookies, but you've
> merely frisbeed them into the bit bin.
>
> It's better than telling Netscape you want to be asked: some
> sites set a dozen cookies per hit, seems like, and saying "no"
> to each gets immediately tedious.  If you tell Netscape to reject
> them, some sites won't serve you the content.  Setting the browser
> to accept everything and linking cookies.txt to /dev/null works
> well for me.

microsoft.com, firefly.com, and parts of yahoo.com wee the only sites I found
that 1) try to set the cookie, 2) test if the cookies is what they expected,
3) refuse to proceed if the cookie isn't what they expected it to be.

Here are a few more neat wafers that I use with junkbuster:

wafer Apache=0
wafer cookieswork=1
# .hotwired.com randomhacker cypherpunks (cypherpunks was already taken
# and password wasn't cypherpunks)
wafer u=randomhacker:XXXrHYVJ4gKTg:888306120:
# barnes and noble cypherpunks
wafer userid=21200U41QE
# .ffly.com v2 random_q_hacker cypherpunks (again, cypherpunks already taken
# with a different password)
wafer NAME=random%5Fq%5Fhacker
wafer ALIAS=random%5Fq%5Fhacker
wafer FIREFLYTICKETV2=a3d11c2224f036b8c5da227f07ac7694b3430734d16595e7ff09c9216dbac8af6
wafer FFLYID=381916
# .ffly.com v3
wafer USERNAME=random$5Fq$5Fhacker
wafer USERID=4031415
wafer USERKEY=rrL2ECYFs8Q
wafer PASSWORD=rrL2ECYFs8Q
# I haven't quite gotten this wafer to work:
# .firefly.net random_q_hacker(.firefly):cypherpunks (won't let user=password)
 wafer FIREFLYTICKETV3	XWHKLLTVMLTVYWVJEHUNMHa\XVLHNHLGHIVRVUKKKKKK
# .yahoo.com cypherpunks:cypherpunks
wafer Y=v=1&n=fh5fme4ro4p10&l=2of74hfkdai/o&p=f1s022r2030r
wafer M=dp=sum&lg=us
wafer T=z=34caa94c

While this is tangentially crypto-relevant, let's start a thread on feeding
wafers to various tracking software to convince it that the same cypherpunks
entity is doing all of our browsing.  Can several of people agree on feeding
the same values of the following wafers:

# .pathfinder.com
wafer PFUID=ffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffff
# webcrawler.com
wafer AnonTrack=FFFFFFFFFFFFFFFF
# RealMedia (NYTimes et al)
wafer RMID=0
# .hotwired.com
wafer p_uniqid=0osqlPoOiF7XKIGM6D
wafer s_uniqid=0osqlPoOiF7XKIGM6D
wafer unique_id=1668800885692100
wafer NGUserID=ced54487-134-885708087-1
wafer session-id=0
wafer session-id-time=0
# .geocities.com
wafer GeoStitial=885690000
wafer GeoId=0
wafer EGSOFT_ID=0
wafer CFID=0
# .four11.com
wafer Urid=68847000
wafer DOL=0
wafer DTRACK=0

Protect your privacy by confusing the software that would violate it.

---

Dr.Dimitri Vulis KOTM
Brighton Beach Boardwalk BBS, Forest Hills, N.Y.: +1-718-261-2013, 14.4Kbps






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