Comments for Cookie Clearinghouse http://cch.law.stanford.edu Cookie Clearinghouse Mon, 15 Jul 2013 16:00:42 +0000 hourly 1 http://wordpress.org/?v=4.0.1 Comment on How The Cookie Clearinghouse Works by The Battle for the Consumer and the Cookie Clearinghouse | Waste Free Advertising http://cch.law.stanford.edu/our-projects/#comment-172 Mon, 15 Jul 2013 16:00:42 +0000 http://cch.law.stanford.edu/?page_id=8#comment-172 […] Stanford University has thrown its hat in the ring along with heavyweights Microsoft, Mozilla and Senator Jay Rockefeller (D-W.Va.) in the battle royale for consumer privacy. Stanford’s contribution is a Cookie Clearinghouse that “will publish block-lists and allow-lists based on objective, predictable criteria.” […]

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Comment on FAQ by Glenn N Davis http://cch.law.stanford.edu/faq/#comment-126 Mon, 08 Jul 2013 11:33:31 +0000 http://cch.law.stanford.edu/?page_id=46#comment-126 It is essential that Americans be FREE to not have their Digital EFFECTS Appropiated without a court order on a piecemeal basis. Blanket orders remind me of Ben Franklin’s advocating “Those who would sacrifice freedom for temporary safety DESERVE NEITHER [Freedom nor Safety].” [Bolding mine.]

What would it take to set up the browser to eliminate the likes of NSA from knowing much from their spying on their fellow Americans. Please invite the People like EFF.org to the table as well.

Finally, Please also include in Firefox a button that provides encryption with a push of that button. Apparently a free society requires transparancy in Government and Extremely Strong ENCRYPTION for every day communications.

Thanks, In advance.
GND

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Comment on FAQ by Glenn N Davis http://cch.law.stanford.edu/faq/#comment-125 Mon, 08 Jul 2013 11:11:15 +0000 http://cch.law.stanford.edu/?page_id=46#comment-125 Please work with SRware the makers of IRON Browser. They are interested in patching the gaping holes in the google chromium browser. I might tell them myself but my Deutsch is none too good. Perhaps you have someone who reads and speaks German might be able to properly invite these security oriented folk to the table. Other people I would love to see include The Calomel.org folk and the Enigmail folk.

Regards: GND

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Comment on Advisory Board by Gloves Come Off in Do Not Track Battle | Cyber Report http://cch.law.stanford.edu/advisory-board/#comment-95 Thu, 04 Jul 2013 15:51:16 +0000 http://cch.law.stanford.edu/?page_id=7#comment-95 […] knows best” system. It is not “independent,” as Mozilla claims, but is stocked with self-interested academic elites with whom Mozilla has long […]

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Comment on FAQ by Mozilla again postpones Firefox third-party cookie-blocking, this time for months Get All Answers http://cch.law.stanford.edu/faq/#comment-90 Wed, 03 Jul 2013 18:45:06 +0000 http://cch.law.stanford.edu/?page_id=46#comment-90 […] hope to complete Phase I in a few months, by Fall 2013,” said the CHH website in a short FAQ published Wednesday. Phase I will involve decision-making on several fronts, including technical […]

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Comment on Advisory Board by The Cookie Clearinghouse | Brendan Eich http://cch.law.stanford.edu/advisory-board/#comment-80 Tue, 02 Jul 2013 01:59:57 +0000 http://cch.law.stanford.edu/?page_id=7#comment-80 […] Mozilla is committing to work with Aleecia and the CCH Advisory Board, whose members include Opera Software, to develop the CCH so that browsers can use its lists to […]

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Comment on How The Cookie Clearinghouse Works by Do Not Track Standards Do Not Coalesce | Larry J Seltzer, Technology Analyst and Consultant http://cch.law.stanford.edu/our-projects/#comment-68 Sun, 30 Jun 2013 04:36:49 +0000 http://cch.law.stanford.edu/?page_id=8#comment-68 […] The Cookie Clearinghouse starts with a series of behavioral rules for user agents before black or whitelists are applied: […]

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Comment on How The Cookie Clearinghouse Works by Mozilla’s Cookie Problem Might Have Been Solved | ITProWire http://cch.law.stanford.edu/our-projects/#comment-55 Thu, 27 Jun 2013 12:33:19 +0000 http://cch.law.stanford.edu/?page_id=8#comment-55 […] blog today with news of a new cookie software system out of Stanford called Cookie Clearinghouse. According to its Web site, it will “publish block-lists and and allow-lists based on objective, predictable […]

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Comment on Advisory Board by Advertising Bureau Calls Mozilla’s Privacy Plan “Kangaroo Cookie Court” | PHP World http://cch.law.stanford.edu/advisory-board/#comment-50 Wed, 26 Jun 2013 18:04:03 +0000 http://cch.law.stanford.edu/?page_id=7#comment-50 […] best’ system. It is not ‘independent,’ as Mozilla claims, but is stocked with self-interested academic elites with whom Mozilla has long histories. Nor is it rational, trusted, or […]

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Comment on Advisory Board by Mozilla's Kangaroo Cookie Court - IABlog http://cch.law.stanford.edu/advisory-board/#comment-41 Tue, 25 Jun 2013 20:29:47 +0000 http://cch.law.stanford.edu/?page_id=7#comment-41 […] best” system. It is not “independent,” as Mozilla claims, but is stocked with self-interested academic elites with whom Mozilla has long histories. Nor is it rational, trusted, or transparent, as I will […]

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