Directory Sites

  • Companies move slowly on P3P adoption

    CNN.com article: Some companies are gradually implementing the proposed Platform for Privacy Preferences[...] But it remains unclear whether P3P will succeed as a standard.

    www.cnn.com

  • Privacy in IE 6.0 MSDN Library Article

    An overview on the privacy requirements of cookies associated with their sites and on the cookie filtering implemented in Internet Explorer 6.

    msdn.microsoft.com

  • Pretty Poor Privacy: An Assessment of P3P and Internet Privacy

    A critical article published by Electronic Privacy Information Center (EPIC) and Junkbusters.

    www.epic.org

  • 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 It is included here for historical reference.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.

    www.wired.com

  • Privacy as Computer Language

    Early P3P Wired article talks about P3P and P3P issues from the WWW7 conference in Australia in March '98.

    www.wired.com

  • Privacy Tools and Services Debut

    A look at the emerging technologies and management of corporate privacy policies. The spawning of a new software and services sector.

    www.informationweek.com

  • The W3C, P3P and the Intermind Patent

    XML.com article. Claims of patent infringement and the potential implications for implementors of the W3C's Platform for Privacy Preferences framework

    www.xml.com

  • Is P3P "the Devil"?

    Paper from the University of Miami School of Law discussing P3P, its potential benefits and pitfalls.

    www.law.miami.edu

  • Pass the P3P

    'Intelligent Enterprise' article on Microsoft's P3P involvement.

    www.intelligententerprise.com

  • P3P: Protector Of Consumers' Online Privacy

    An overview of the W3C's new P3P protocol for implementing consumer privacy preferences. Includes discussion on Microsoft, I.E. 6 and online privacy for consumers.

    www.informationweek.com

  • Can a labeling system protect your privacy?

    "[P3P] has been both lauded as the answer to everyone's privacy worries and castigated as a Trojan horse that will divert public attention from real problems. The truth is, it's neither. It's merely a potentially nifty tool that might help ensure privacy in cyberspace -- if the government gets its act together. "

    www.salon.com

  • Privacy Policy

    New Architect review of IBM's P3P Policy Editor. Pro's and Con's as well as an introduction to the practical use of the Editor to generate your policy.

    www.webtechniques.com

  • Adam Smith Leads P3P Privacy Resolution

    Congressman Adam Smith (D-WA) and 4 New Democrat colleagues in the House - introduce a resolution that recognizes the importance of the Platform for Privacy Preferences (P3P) specification as a key tool for consumers who want to protect their privacy on the Internet. In an effort to promote widespread adoption of the technology, the resolution also urges all government and commercial web sites operators to make their sites P3P compliant.

    www.house.gov

  • Network Computing | Workshop | Security | P3P's Privacy Promises | Page 1 | July 23, 2001

    This article talks about the Platform for Privacy Preferences Project, and talks about P3P's goal of building trust between users and Web site operators without requiring users to read and interpret the site's privacy policies.

    www.networkcomputing.com

  • SuperCookies bypass P3P and cookie controls

    Article by Richard M. Smith point out an Internet Explorer potential privacy design flaw.

    computerbytesman.com

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