Settings

Theme

Verizon Wireless to Allow Complete Opt Out of Mobile ‘Supercookies’

bits.blogs.nytimes.com

24 points by growupkids 11 years ago · 11 comments

Reader

revelation 11 years ago

That's nice of our corporate overlords. They will even, after due hassle and harassment, allow our data to be transmitted free of intentional modification.

Clearly we need less regulation to make sure this sane business thrives.

higherpurpose 11 years ago

Who gave them permission to insert the cookies into our traffic in the first place? Hopefully whatever net neutrality law passes, bans carriers from interfering in such a way with the user's traffic or from tracking the users in any other way.

  • seanp2k2 11 years ago

    Pretty sure they were going with the "beg for forgiveness" option. They certainly have enough money and lawyers to go do whatever they want in the name of profit.

    • higherpurpose 11 years ago

      And it worked. Now they won't track 100 percent of the users, but they'll track "only" 95+ percent probably.

  • rayiner 11 years ago

    If Google put ads into the headers for your gmail, would that require your permission?

    • jakevn 11 years ago

      Were the ad to pose a security risk, and you, a paying user of Gmail would have no way to opt out, then sure.

      • 001sky 11 years ago

        Everything that tracks you is a security risk...the only question is whose security are we talking about? The plebeian masses don't deserve security...but the corporate overlords sure as hell need it. What do you think keeps them in power/?

ashearer 11 years ago

Verizon is still giving out misinformation on this. A support representative confirmed to me in writing today that "As of February 1, 2015, Verizon Wireless will not send an identifier to third parties." However, it's still being sent, and a higher-up representative said later that a third-party identifier will currently always be sent, and there's no known timeframe for availability of an opt-out program.

jMyles 11 years ago

I'm of a different mindset than to believe that this can be legislated away or fixed in any part of the transit.

We need to work toward (and we have nearly achieved) a situation where our endpoints are strong and intelligent enough that no manipulation of this sort is possible.

  • wtallis 11 years ago

    This issue is entirely about connecting to an untrusted endpoint. No endpoint-based solution is possible. This has to be dealt with by ensuring that the transit provider won't sell you out.

Keyboard Shortcuts

j
Next item
k
Previous item
o / Enter
Open selected item
?
Show this help
Esc
Close modal / clear selection