I don't see why so many people hate cookies (or advise
not to use them).
I have the same problem here, I wrote a webmail app using
Apache::Session to keep track of users. The session ID goes
back out in a cookie, but all my coworkers said "Why the
hell do you use cookies? Use hidden fields!". But sometimes
I don't want to set up a FORM tag to provide some action -
users can click on a link to read a mail for instance. So,
if I put the session ID into the link (to get to it via GET)
and someone reads a mail with a link inside (URLs in mails
are getting autoconverted to links) and hits the link -
voila, the session id is stored on the remote server in the
referer log. Ok, this would work only for ten minutes (until
the session expires) but that was the way that gmx.de
was hacked - 1600 accounts lost their passwords.
Sometimes one doesn't get away without cookies trivially. | [reply] |
Hmm. I don't know why you went off on the "cookies" thing. The problem here is that d_i_r_t_y wants to have two parallel conversations within one browser, and you can't do that purely with cookies, because the browser will happily send the identically same cookie to both "session" hits. So you can't use cookies or basic auth, and that means you're stuck with mangled URLs or hidden fields. That, or PSI::ESP, which hasn't been uploaded yet, but I have a feeling it will shortly.
As for why some people "hate cookies (or advise not to use them)", I can give you my take on that. Cookies used for long-term authentication presume the demonstratably false statement of "one user is one browser", as opposed to session cookies, which I actually consider OK unless it breaks something like in d_i_r_t_y's case.
In a given day, I'm popping back and forth between three or four browsers, and some of the browsers I use are on other people's machines, especially in internet cafes and such. So if you're crazy enough to use cookies for auth:
- be sure to give me a way not to do that if I know I'm in a shared-browser
place
- time out the cookie at one day or less (in case I forget to "log out" at an internet
cafe in the city I just left)
- make it very clear that I'm "logged in"
- make it very easy to "log out"
- make it very easy to "log in" on another browser
- make it possible to use the site entirely without cookies for the very
paranoid.
As a good model, look at Amazon. When
I'm logged in, at the top of each page it says "If you're not randal, click here". Very
clear to me that Amazon thinks my browser is me. And it's easy to log back in on
a different browser, and log out on this one. And the site works without cookies
at all (if I recall) because they give a session ID in a mangled URL for the particular shopping cart:
I just don't get my preferences or "One-Click(tm) Shopping".
Because of that last point, you've got to provide a mangled URL or hidden field
solution anyway. So the easiest way out is to go ahead and presume "no cookies",
and then slowly add in to the design a way of having longer term recognition, as
long as you stay within the guidelines above.
-- Randal L. Schwartz, Perl hacker
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| [reply] |
The problem here is that d_i_r_t_y wants to have two
parallel conversations within one browser, and you can't
do that purely with cookies, because the browser will
happily send the identically same cookie to both
"session" hits.
Well, there are ways around that, if you really, really
wanted too, but you'd have to have the server do more work
than it should.
I am definitely in the "both" camp, however: allow
for a user to use cookies or not use cookies, as they
please. Not that I'd ever use
Amazon as an
example. :)
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