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				helpful e-commerce website
				Posted: Tue Jan 20, 2004 2:26 pm
				by Pam
				FYI - I just found this website  
http://ecommerce.internet.com/ that has a lot of good generic info for small biz and e-commerce. 
It sends a lot of cookies though (I have them turned off so I have to click to accept in my browser because I'm kind of a privacy freak)
 
			 
			
					
				Cookies -- myth vs. fact
				Posted: Tue Jan 20, 2004 7:44 pm
				by Paul Tarlow
				Pam wrote:FYI - I just found this website  
http://ecommerce.internet.com/ that has a lot of good generic info for small biz and e-commerce. 
It sends a lot of cookies though (I have them turned off so I have to click to accept in my browser because I'm kind of a privacy freak)
 
Cookies only contain info the site put there in the first place.   Amazon, for example, cannot read Ebay's cookies.
You don't really improve privacy much by disabling cookies -- though you will find many sites won't work properly. The main point of a cookie is to allow a site to remember (persist) data between pages and or visits.  If you are sensitive that a company knows you've been to the site 3 times before buying that new Justin Timberlake CD then you're correct to disable cookies.
I get a kick out of folks (not necissarily you) who turn off cookies but then use the same login password at every site.  On a scale of which is most likely to get you in trouble, re-using passwords is much higher on the uh-oh list.
If you really want to protect privacy, make sure you're shredding all the credit card applications that come in the mail 

   That's where much of the identity theft starts.
- Paul
 
			 
			
					
				Re: Cookies -- myth vs. fact
				Posted: Tue Jan 20, 2004 11:16 pm
				by Susan Moore
				Paul Tarlow wrote:
If you really want to protect privacy, make sure you're shredding all the credit card applications that come in the mail 

   That's where much of the identity theft starts.
- Paul
 
Or you could send the applications back in the lovely postage paid envelope - without filling out any info.  I used to put other junk mail in the envelopes and send them back but that became tedious rather quickly so now I just send back the blank application and leave the shredding to them.
 
			 
			
					
				Re: Cookies -- myth vs. fact
				Posted: Tue Jan 20, 2004 11:39 pm
				by Paul Tarlow
				Susan Moore wrote:Paul Tarlow wrote:
If you really want to protect privacy, make sure you're shredding all the credit card applications that come in the mail 

   That's where much of the identity theft starts.
- Paul
 
Or you could send the applications back in the lovely postage paid envelope - without filling out any info.  I used to put other junk mail in the envelopes and send them back but that became tedious rather quickly so now I just send back the blank application and leave the shredding to them.
 
I love that idea.
Its right up there with telling telemarketers you are very interested and could they just hold a minute...and then leave them on hold
 

 
			 
			
					
				Re: Cookies -- myth vs. fact
				Posted: Wed Jan 21, 2004 12:15 am
				by Terry Ow-Wing
				......
I love that idea.
Its right up there with telling telemarketers you are very interested and could they just hold a minute...and then leave them on hold
 

Here's one my husband pulled off.  Now mind you he is NOT the prankster type.  Got a call from the telemarketer and he gave them oh yes we are interested could you hold one minute - then he handed the phone to my 2 year old daughter and she was just starting to babble....I had no idea what was going on - but it sure made me laugh later...