State management and cookies allow websites to identify users and maintain information about their online activities. Cookies are small files placed on a user's browser by websites that contain identifying information. This enables features like remembering login details and keeping track of items in shopping carts. There are first and third party cookies, with third party cookies serving targeted ads based on a user's interests. While cookies don't contain personal details, they allow sites to recognize users across sessions. Users can control which cookies are accepted by their browsers.
cookie is a small amount of data generated by a website and saved by your web browser. Its purpose is to remember information about you, similar to a preference file created by a software application.
Internet Cookies presentation contains-
What is internet cookies?
Who can see this cookies?
How does it look like?
History
Types
Uses
Limitations
Disadvantages
cookie is a small amount of data generated by a website and saved by your web browser. Its purpose is to remember information about you, similar to a preference file created by a software application.
Cookies are a great tool for a good website's performance, but they also pose a privacy risk if they are not managed well. This simple presentation covers privacy issues emerging from the use of cookies, and what you can do about it.
Digital analytics meetup #20, Thessaloniki. Introduction on the technical elements (cookies, localstorage, link decoration etc.) of web user authentication and anti-tracking mechanisms available
Digital Advertising, Privacy and User-tracking MethodsHonza Pav
Digital advertising is getting more automated and driven by data. Cookies is the most common user-tracking technology but it is not very efficient and is regulated. In the presentation, I describe methods like supercookies and device fingerprinting and ways how users can get aware of who is tracking them. Made for New York University in Prague.
It can be challenging for marketers to keep track of the flurry of activity surrounding web cookies. This quick guide provides an overview of how web cookies work, what’s changing, and how you can future-proof your business — no matter what transformations the digital marketing landscape experiences in the next few months.
This PPT is meant to let the reader know what a cookie is. It is aimed at increasing the reader’s knowledge regarding the use of cookies, their types, along with the general rules that govern their usage.
On February 18th 2015, TagCommander and AT Internet hosted a seminar on the subject of Data Privacy. By popular demand, we are making the presentations available. You can now view the presentation of Vincent Toubiana, IT Expert at the French data protection authority on Slideshare.
In it you will learn about:
- The issues at stake in European data protection legislation with a focus on France
- Site and app functionality addressed, exemptions, informed consent
- Cookie and tracking functionality and the evolving law
- Some tips for technical compliance
Marketing Cookies – Everything You Need To Know.pptxTurboAnchor
You planned to take a road trip to the hilly areas or the beach. You started searching the websites to know a little about your destination. You might also log onto the sites of attractions, restaurants, and hotels in that area. Later on, when you surf any news sites, entertainment blogs, and community sites, you start seeing ads from the same hotels and attractions.
read more: https://turboanchor.com/marketing-cookies-everything-you-need-to-know/
This is a brief policy primer on Google's Privacy and Terms of Use details. Explained without dogma, instead with an insight into how their guidelines impact on your digital shadow online.
"Your customer data flows faster each day, which is why collecting, organizing, and doing something meaningful with it is just good business.
But, it can be tough to do.
Stashing data in different places across your organization to come back (hopefully) later is a great way to mismanage or lose it. Squirrels can stash, but enterprises can’t.
You need a customer data platform (CDP). A central command center that securely holds your customer data and lets you organize it according to your goals.
The thing is, what’s best for you? A CDP out-of-the-box? Building a customer data solution yourself? There’s merit in both options, and this webinar is here to help you narrow down what’s best for your business. Acquia, Bounteous, and Appnovation will show you:
How a single source for customer data storage can mitigate risk and optimize customer experience
How central data governance will help your customer data strategy once the almighty Google takes away cookies
The comprehensive CDP build-or-buy checklist + CDP must-haves for your budget
First-party data management that keeps your customers' data safe and your business booming
It’s 10 PM, do you know where your data is?"
cookie is a small amount of data generated by a website and saved by your web browser. Its purpose is to remember information about you, similar to a preference file created by a software application.
Internet Cookies presentation contains-
What is internet cookies?
Who can see this cookies?
How does it look like?
History
Types
Uses
Limitations
Disadvantages
cookie is a small amount of data generated by a website and saved by your web browser. Its purpose is to remember information about you, similar to a preference file created by a software application.
Cookies are a great tool for a good website's performance, but they also pose a privacy risk if they are not managed well. This simple presentation covers privacy issues emerging from the use of cookies, and what you can do about it.
Digital analytics meetup #20, Thessaloniki. Introduction on the technical elements (cookies, localstorage, link decoration etc.) of web user authentication and anti-tracking mechanisms available
Digital Advertising, Privacy and User-tracking MethodsHonza Pav
Digital advertising is getting more automated and driven by data. Cookies is the most common user-tracking technology but it is not very efficient and is regulated. In the presentation, I describe methods like supercookies and device fingerprinting and ways how users can get aware of who is tracking them. Made for New York University in Prague.
It can be challenging for marketers to keep track of the flurry of activity surrounding web cookies. This quick guide provides an overview of how web cookies work, what’s changing, and how you can future-proof your business — no matter what transformations the digital marketing landscape experiences in the next few months.
This PPT is meant to let the reader know what a cookie is. It is aimed at increasing the reader’s knowledge regarding the use of cookies, their types, along with the general rules that govern their usage.
On February 18th 2015, TagCommander and AT Internet hosted a seminar on the subject of Data Privacy. By popular demand, we are making the presentations available. You can now view the presentation of Vincent Toubiana, IT Expert at the French data protection authority on Slideshare.
In it you will learn about:
- The issues at stake in European data protection legislation with a focus on France
- Site and app functionality addressed, exemptions, informed consent
- Cookie and tracking functionality and the evolving law
- Some tips for technical compliance
Marketing Cookies – Everything You Need To Know.pptxTurboAnchor
You planned to take a road trip to the hilly areas or the beach. You started searching the websites to know a little about your destination. You might also log onto the sites of attractions, restaurants, and hotels in that area. Later on, when you surf any news sites, entertainment blogs, and community sites, you start seeing ads from the same hotels and attractions.
read more: https://turboanchor.com/marketing-cookies-everything-you-need-to-know/
This is a brief policy primer on Google's Privacy and Terms of Use details. Explained without dogma, instead with an insight into how their guidelines impact on your digital shadow online.
"Your customer data flows faster each day, which is why collecting, organizing, and doing something meaningful with it is just good business.
But, it can be tough to do.
Stashing data in different places across your organization to come back (hopefully) later is a great way to mismanage or lose it. Squirrels can stash, but enterprises can’t.
You need a customer data platform (CDP). A central command center that securely holds your customer data and lets you organize it according to your goals.
The thing is, what’s best for you? A CDP out-of-the-box? Building a customer data solution yourself? There’s merit in both options, and this webinar is here to help you narrow down what’s best for your business. Acquia, Bounteous, and Appnovation will show you:
How a single source for customer data storage can mitigate risk and optimize customer experience
How central data governance will help your customer data strategy once the almighty Google takes away cookies
The comprehensive CDP build-or-buy checklist + CDP must-haves for your budget
First-party data management that keeps your customers' data safe and your business booming
It’s 10 PM, do you know where your data is?"
1. An Introduction to STATE MANAGEMENT/COOKIES by Elise Chisholm May 12, 2010
2. STATE MANAGEMENT What is it? State management technology allows websites to identify you, maintain information about you, and even track your online movements.
3. STATE MANAGEMENT Before state management, the web was like a vending machine. It had little regard for your identity, what products you want, and how many purchases you’ve made. You couldn’t buy multiple products at one time, and there was no “oneclick” feature to remember your personal information. There are two types of state management: Server side Client side
4. STATE MANAGEMENT Client side – minimal security but faster performance Server side – higher security but can lead to scalability issues when information store is large Session state View state Query strings Database support Hidden fields Profile properties Control state Application state Cookies Server side Client side
5. COOKIES What are they? Cookies are small files that websites place on your browser. Information travels back and forth between your browser (Firefox, Internet Explorer, etc.) and the websites you’re visiting. They’re usually a combo of letters and numbers
6. COOKIES For example: If I visit Google for the first time, Google places a cookie on my browser. The next time I visit Google – seconds, days or weeks later – my browser sends Google that same cookie with a cookie ID number that allows Google to recognize my computer.
7. COOKIES Cookies enable websites to remember your login details every time you visit, and help online stores to keep track of which items you’ve added to your shopping cart. All search engines and most websites use cookies.
8. COOKIES Third party cookies serve up ads that are relevant to your interests, control the number of times you see an ad, and measure the effectiveness of ad campaigns. There are two types of cookies: first party cookies and third party cookies. Travel back and forth between your browser and the website of a company that’s displaying an ad on the site you’re visiting (usually an ad serving company) Travel back and forth between your browser and the website you’re visiting , allowing that website to store information about your preferences Third party cookies First party cookies
9.
10. PRIVACY Most of the time there’s no personally identifiable info in a cookie file (like name, email address, phone number). Cookies can’t be used to run programs on your computer, access info on your hard drive, or deliver viruses. Google has five privacy principles that describe how the company approaches privacy and user information.
11. PRIVACY You can control which cookies get sent to your browser. To refuse cookies on Firefox or Internet Explorer (if you’re on a PC), click on Tools, Options, Privacy, Show Cookies, Remove.
12. REFERENCES Information sources: Duffy, J. (2004, September/October). State management. Component Developer Magazine . Retrieved May 2010 from http://www.code-magazine.com/article.aspx?quickid =0409061 . Fink, G. (2008, June 30). ASP.NET client side state management. .NET Zone . Retrieved May 2010 from http://dotnet.dzone.com/news/aspnet-server-side-state-manag . Google (2010). Google privacy: a look at cookies. Retrieved May 2010 from http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XfZLztx8cKI . MSDN (2010). ASP.NET state management recommendations. Retrieved May 2010 from http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/z1hkazw7.aspx . Shah, R. & Kesan, J. (2009). Recipes for cookies: how institutions shape communication technology. New Media & Society . Retrieved May 2010 from http://nms.sagepub.com/cgi/content/abstract/11/3/315 .
13. REFERENCES Information sources (continued): Shillan, C. (2004, March). Deferred ASP.NET session state management. MSDN . Retrieved May 2010 from http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/aa479324.aspx . Tech Republic (2003, March 12). Retrieved May 2010 from http://articles.techrepublic.com.com/5100-10878_11-1058704.html?tag=rbxccnbtr1 . Tech Republic (2003, March 19). Retrieved May 2010 from http://articles.techrepublic.com.com/5100-10878_11-5030436.html .
14. REFERENCES Images sources: Amazon.com (2010). Retrieved May 2010 from http:// www.amazon.com / . Google (2010). Google privacy: a look at cookies. Retrieved May 2010 from http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XfZLztx8cKI . Google (2010). Retrieved May 2010 from http://www.google.com/ . Mozilla Firefox (2010). Retrieved May 2010 from http://www.google.com/firefox?client=firefox-a&rls=org.mozilla:en-US:official .