Netscape "What's Related"

From: Flemming S. Johansen (fsjat_private)
Date: Thu Oct 22 1998 - 04:22:15 PDT

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    Starting with version 4.06, the Netscape browser has a new "What's
    Related?" button next to the Location: field. After having tried it
    in the new 4.5, I am more than a little worried by the functionality
    behind it.
    
    Briefly, the user clicks on this button, and is presented with a
    list of sites which are hopefully related to the page currently
    on display, plus some ads for Netscape.
    
    As far as I have been able to deduce (helped by a packet sniffer), this
    works by opening a HTTP connection to www-rl.netscape.com and making a
    query modelled on this template: GET /wtgn?CurrentURL/ HTTP/1.0, where
    CurrentUrl is the URL of the page currently displayed.  The server
    responds with a list of URLs it believe to be related. There are four
    modes for this function, settable through preferences->navigator->smart
    browsing:
    
        - "Always" The browser always downloads the list of 'related'
          URLS, beginning while the page in question is loading.
    
        - "Never" The browser starts downloading the list of 'related'
          URLS when the user clicks on the 'What's related?' button.
    
        - "After first use" Automatically fetches the URL list for
          a page if the user has ever clicked the button for that
          page.
    
        - Completely disabled.
    
    The default setting is "Always". So, the unsuspecting user who upgrades
    to the latest Netscape will automatically and unknowingly begin sending
    out a detailed log of pages viewed.
    
    Netscapes privacy statement notwithstanding, I don't like the fact that
    anyone is able to compile a list of every single web page I visit. I
    don't like the fact that someone with a sniffer anywhere on the path
    from here to netscape.com is able to do so either.  And the company I
    work for is not too thrilled about the name of every single document on
    our internal, not-for-public-viewing web server leaking out on the Net,
    once our users begin installing this release on their PCs.
    
    I would like to control this "feature" globally for my LAN, but as far
    as I can see, there are only two ways of doing it: Fascist control of
    Netscape preferences settings on every PC on my LAN, or block
    www-rl.netscape.com in the firewall.
    
    --
      ----------------------------------------------------------------------
            Flemming S. Johansen
            fsjat_private
    



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