LiveWire Network Peer Answers Peer Support Teen Forums Tech Forums College Forums 644 users online 224037 members 1497 active today Advertise Here Sign In
TeenCollegeTechPhotos | Quizzes | LiveSecret | Memberlist | Dictionary | News | FAQ
Member Spotlight
rileyy
http://coolstorybro.me S Ξ G
Mood: Wishful
You have 1 new message.
Emergency Help
Until you sign up you can't do much. Yes, it's free.

Sign Up Now
Membername:
Password:
Already have an account?
Invite Friends
Active Members
Groups
Contests
Moderators
9 online / 20 MPM
Fresh Topics
  LiveWire / Technical Forums / Computer Virus & Anti-Virus Software / Adding Reply

Quoting Post
Archived Topic: It will not be bumped to the top of the forum.
Topic Tracking cookie ALREADY?!
Membername   Not a member? Sign Up Free (takes 20 seconds)
Password   Forgotten your password?
Post

Font:   Size:   Color:

FAQ Keyword Search:
Post Options
Favorites Manager
Notify me of new replies to this topic by email
Notify me of new replies to this topic by private message
Original Post
maxwell92 Posted at 8:25 pm on Aug. 9, 2008
I just restored my computer today. I connected to the internet, and installed the Norton Antivirus software (I didn't download it illegally... I got it from my ISP, who gives me Norton for free).

So, I install it, and do a full system scan. It goes over about 2,500 or so files. At the end - it finds a tracking cookie. The only internet activity I did was go to Craigslist to check on something - which is a completely trustworthy site, as well as download a driver from the IBM website.

Does anybody know why a tracking cookie may have already sprung up in this install's 30 minutes of existence?

Replies
raymond08 Posted at 8:01 am on Sep. 26, 2008
Lets just say its like market research
holysaiyan1 Posted at 6:27 am on Sep. 26, 2008
Quote: from maxwell92 at 11:25 pm on Aug. 9, 2008

I just restored my computer today. I connected to the internet, and installed the Norton Antivirus software (I didn't download it illegally... I got it from my ISP, who gives me Norton for free).

So, I install it, and do a full system scan. It goes over about 2,500 or so files. At the end - it finds a tracking cookie. The only internet activity I did was go to Craigslist to check on something - which is a completely trustworthy site, as well as download a driver from the IBM website.

Does anybody know why a tracking cookie may have already sprung up in this install's 30 minutes of existence?


Many websites, including IBM's website and Craiglist, leave cookies on your website.  They are not inherently bad, and there is little to no performance impact.  A cookie is basically a text file (.txt) with information about "who" you are (as far as the site knows) and what you did (items you placed in your shopping cart during the current site session, links you clicked, site preferences, etc.) while at the site.  Some cookies work for multiple, affiliated sites, so that your preferences persist across browsing sessions.

Basically, if you do any kind of Internet browsing, you get cookies.  Just delete them, they do nothing on their own, as they are not computer programs.

Reefer Posted at 8:28 pm on Aug. 9, 2008
Tracking cookies are sometimes good.
721 Posted at 8:26 pm on Aug. 9, 2008
because you blanked out while looking at gayporn?
Hi James Posted at 8:26 pm on Aug. 9, 2008
only 2500?  Are you on a walky talky?
All 5 previous replies displayed.