Re: Unverifiable Transactions / Cookie draft
Dwight Merriman (dmerriman@doubleclick.net)
Mon, 17 Mar 1997 13:46:05 -0500
Agreed. But I think if one looks at the long run, which is what is most
important for a standard, all the proxies will work properly.
I just find it kind of weird that the RFC specs nondeterministic behavior
-- sometimes cookies work, sometimes they don't, and you can't always know
when they will without a lot of complexity.
Dwight
----------
> From: M. Hedlund <hedlund@best.com>
> To: Dwight Merriman <dmerriman@doubleclick.net>
> Cc: http <http-wg@cuckoo.hpl.hp.com>; dmk@allegra.att.com;
montulli@netscape.com; yarong@microsoft.com
> Subject: Re: Unverifiable Transactions / Cookie draft
> Date: Monday, March 17, 1997 12:34 PM
>
>
> On Mon, 17 Mar 1997, Dwight Merriman wrote:
> > Designers of web sites (at least the large percentage who will
advertise on
> > the web) will have to take into account that cookie assignments on
their
> > home page may fail a large percentage of the time. If they wish to
measure
> > number of unique visitors to their site, they will get a highly
inaccurate
> > reading since often multiple cookies will be assignied to a single user
> > before one "sticks".
>
> This is reportedly already the case to due to faulty proxies. I believe
> Hotwired keeps an extensive database of which proxies fail to properly
> pass-through cookie assignments as a result.
>
> My point is simply that other system faults already require the
complexity
> you mention.
>
> M. Hedlund <hedlund@best.com>