Mailbag: P3P misses the privacy boat Many of you wrote in to agree with me that the W3C's Platform for Privacy Preferences might be a far cry from an antidote to privacy woes. http://www.networkworld.com/newsletters/ecomm/2002/01336939.html Networkworld.com~Site InfoWhoisTrace RouteRBL Check
P3P plan: How is it deployed, what is collected. What exactly is collected, shared and acted upon isn't always evident to end users. This may lead to trust problems between site visitors and site owners, resulting in loss of business and even legal problems. http://www.networkworld.com/research/2002/0930p3p.html Networkworld.com~Site InfoWhoisTrace RouteRBL Check
Promise of P3P stalls as backers regroup Six months after its recommendation as an Internet standard, a major privacy initiative is entering an awkward adolescence as software heavyweights adopt it and individual Web sites leave it to languish. http://news.cnet.com/2100-1023-963632.html Cnet.com~Site InfoWhoisTrace RouteRBL Check
Microsoft Buys Into Privacy This article does not mention P3P directly. It is included here for historical reference. Microsoft began its internal P3P initiative with this acquisition. http://www.wired.com/techbiz/media/news/1998/04/11586 Wired.com~Site InfoWhoisTrace RouteRBL Check
Wired News: Patent May Threaten E-Privacy The future of a key Web standard that would give consumers control over their online privacy hangs in the balance after news emerged that an entrepreneur will likely be awarded a set of patents on the technology. http://www.wired.com/science/discoveries/news/1998/11/16180 Wired.com~Site InfoWhoisTrace RouteRBL Check
Turning up the heat on Web privacy When Microsoft introduced version 6 of its Internet Explorer browser last year, many webmasters were puzzled to find that their cookies were being blocked in increasing numbers. [Cnet News] http://news.cnet.com/2008-1082-966268.html Cnet.com~Site InfoWhoisTrace RouteRBL Check