Policy talk:Privacy policy: Difference between revisions

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Latest comment: 8 years ago by Bawolff in topic third party cookies
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when conspiraring against another will get 30 years behind bars. and when ones constition rights have been violated or controlled the fed should now intervien and take action and track eack person down and prosecute them
when conspiraring against another will get 30 years behind bars. and when ones constition rights have been violated or controlled the fed should now intervien and take action and track eack person down and prosecute them
my computer will be turned into the feds and they can track what others have done
my computer will be turned into the feds and they can track what others have done

== third party cookies ==

The policy states ''We will never use third-party cookies, unless we get your permission to do so''. Where it uses third-party cookies to mean cookies from domains not under control of the WMF. However, wikipedia defines the term as ''"Third-party cookies, however, belong to domains different from the one shown in the address bar"'', which is something we do use. I think that line in the privacy policy should be clarified. [[User:Bawolff|Bawolff]] ([[User talk:Bawolff|talk]]) 23:22, 19 October 2015 (UTC)

Revision as of 23:22, 19 October 2015

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Do Facebook and the USA violate EU data protection law? The CJEU hearing in Schrems

Very interesting debate summary in here: http://eulawanalysis.blogspot.co.uk/2015/03/does-facebook-and-usa-violate-eu-data.html --Nemo 14:47, 8 May 2015 (UTC)Reply

conspiracy to another

when conspiraring against another will get 30 years behind bars. and when ones constition rights have been violated or controlled the fed should now intervien and take action and track eack person down and prosecute them my computer will be turned into the feds and they can track what others have done

third party cookies

The policy states We will never use third-party cookies, unless we get your permission to do so. Where it uses third-party cookies to mean cookies from domains not under control of the WMF. However, wikipedia defines the term as "Third-party cookies, however, belong to domains different from the one shown in the address bar", which is something we do use. I think that line in the privacy policy should be clarified. Bawolff (talk) 23:22, 19 October 2015 (UTC)Reply