How to delete Zombie Cookies

Discussion in 'privacy problems' started by VenInd, Aug 1, 2012.

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  1. VenInd

    VenInd Registered Member

  2. Newby

    Newby Registered Member

    When marketeers are that smart to use 9 digit RGB code in small pixel pictures for ID-tracking they deserve to trace your habits :oops:

    Suppose most of the zombie cookies can be cleaned using ccleaner and reading the wiki article
     
  3. Chiron

    Chiron Registered Member

  4. mirimir

    mirimir Registered Member

    It's prudent to assume that all activity on a particular computer can be correlated. Using different VMs on the same host is OK unless it really matters. Using different physical machines is safest. Avoid connections via networks, shared drives, USB drives, etc.
     
  5. VenInd

    VenInd Registered Member

  6. VenInd

    VenInd Registered Member


    Hard task.
     
  7. hogndog

    hogndog Registered Member

  8. LockBox

    LockBox Registered Member

    I abhor this practice. I'm afraid that it's the wave of the future unless it's stopped. Especially the cloud-based storage of cookies linked to unique identifiers from a users computer. I think, in a way, Amazon is very much like that whether you actually call it a "cookie" or not. It's all for their recommendations when you sign-in. Frankly, I get much value from that and don't see it the same as some of these that are simply collecting aggregate data to sell; worse yet, to pitch me products I have no interest in, but based on random collection from your area, etc.

    The difference: with Amazon, you have to sign-in. These nefarious sites recognize your computer from that unique ID tied to a cloud-based cookie. ("This computer's been here before!")
     
  9. Tomwa

    Tomwa Registered Member

    If you want to avoid Zombie cookies why not run the browser in a sandbox such as sandboxie (Theres a free version) and simply set it to delete the sandbox on closure? This way no cookies could persist because the browser cannot create anything outside the sandbox.
     
  10. sdmod

    sdmod Shadow Defender Expert

    I agree Tomwa Sandboxie is superb for this sort of thing.

     
  11. arran

    arran Registered Member

    Rest assured there is a way, there is a way to permanently block flash cookies from being placed on your harddisk in the first place. This solution is better than having to have ff addon called betterprivacy

    This is what you do, create a zero byte file and name it "Macromedia" then navigate local disk c, Users, pc name, app data, Roaming and in there you will see a folder called Macromedia in that folder is where the flash cookies are created. Delete the Macromedia folder and then put in the zero byte file you created. Now because it is now a file instead of folder no new flash cookies can be created and the OS cannot create another Macromedia folder because there is a file already there with the same name. End result no more Flash cookies. :D :D :D
     
  12. arran

    arran Registered Member


    There is also another firefox addon which you should add to your blog, I just found it the other day it kicks ass one of the best Ive seen, its a user agent Randomizer it changes your user agent every time you load a webpage or refresh an existing page. a perfect tool to block Finger Printing.

    Secret Agent

    https://www.dephormation.org.uk/?page=81
     
  13. hogndog

    hogndog Registered Member

    W.O.T had some things to say, but I've seen them to be overcritical before..

    https://www.mywot.com/en/scorecard/phorm.com
     
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