Browsers May Invite Cyber-Sleuths

Published: 4 December 1999 y., Saturday
If you read an unsolicited e-mail, someone could be tracking your Web surfing. Enabled by a security loophole in your browser, this possible cyber-spying has privacy and consumer groups up in arms. The groups are asking the U.S. Federal Trade Commission to require software makers to take action and close the loophole. A letter and a detailed report of the security hole was sent this week to the FTC by organizations including the Electronic Privacy Information Center, Electronic Frontier Foundation, and antispam group Junkbusters, according to a joint statement issued Thursday. The problem affects people with e-mail readers formatted in HTML, which includes popular programs such as Outlook, Outlook Express, Netscape Messenger, Eudora, and Hotmail, according to the report, written by Richard Smith, a security consultant. Although most people know that when they visit a Web site, it creates a cookie, or unique serial number, which allows their surfing behavior to be traced, many do not know that a cookie can be created when they read an unsolicited e-mail via a Web browser, Smith says in the report. A cookie is created when users read such a message with graphics in it, such as a banner advertisement off the Web. These banner ad companies typically "hide" the recipient_s e-mail address in the Web address of the graphic, so that their servers can later match the cookie to the recipient_s e-mail address, Smith_s report says. This information is often sold to spammers, or senders of unsolicited commercial e-mails. The problem could be solved if Microsoft and Netscape Communications closed the security hole in their browsers, Smith_s report says.
Šaltinis: IDG News Service
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

New Debit, Credit Cards in Bulgaria

All Bulgarians possessing debit or credit cards will have to replace them with new "plastic purses" in 2005 more »

search.lt news

search.lt presents newest links more »

search.lt news

search.lt presents newest links more »

Security incidents and cybercrime on the up

Security events recorded between July and September this year are up 150 per cent on those recorded by security company VeriSign in the same period last year more »

search.lt news

search.lt presents newest links more »

CASHING IN ON CREDIT

Banks partner with popular brands to promote credit cards more »

Virtualization company moves wares to Windows

SWsoft, a company that lets a Linux server be subdivided into independent partitions, is ready to begin testing a Windows version of its product more »

Estonia to Run Tests on 'E-Voting' System

Some Estonians will be able to vote online next year, as Tallinn plans trials with electronic voting software that is the first step toward a nationwide e-voting system more »

search.lt news

search.lt presents newest links more »

Closed Chechen Web site reopens out of Finland

A Web site used by a Chechen warlord to claim responsibility for last month's school siege in Russia has come back online based out of Finland more »