Dog fighting is a type of blood sport that turns game and fighting dogs against each other in a physical fight, often to the death, for the purposes of gambling or entertainment to the spectators.[1] In rural areas,…
I’m used to a quick fire response format for legal questioning. My words are carefully chosen, but I do reply quickly because I played every question in my head in advance. The dig on downvotes however was intentionally…
We don’t process it, not our decorator.
Max is a lawyer, I'm an engineer. ;-)
Oh, I very much am not.
That's why webXray (https://webxray.ai) has perfected forensic privacy auditing - we catch every code change that has visible traces. I'll catch the same thing any way you do it - cookies, local storage, js obfuscated…
Cookies serve a lot of valuable purposes, it's important to disambiguate.
Appreciated, means a lot. I'm not surprised at the downvotes, but someday we all have to look in the mirror and decide if we like what we see, but it's easier to downvote in the meantime.
We run scientific audits that provide evidence of specific data transfers under specific network conditions.
Ha, the question is always "which humans"!
For legal work you need a controlled forensic environment, this is evidence gathering in the same way a crime scene is. We've developed a lot of proprietary methods to ensure clean-room conditions. That's not to say the…
That concept is applicable to the European Union, doesn't apply in California.
2 quarters. ;-)
To quote our report: At webXray we are experts in tracking technologies, and we work closely with in-house counsel, defense, plaintiff firms, and regulators. However, we are not lawyers ourselves, thus nothing in this…
No idea, I thought it was a valid question and we go to great lengths in our methodology for this reason. The audits we supply for enterprise are highly specific as to cookie purpose for this reason: https://webxray.ai
That's their decision, our report is very factually designed: https://globalprivacyaudit.org
And the tellers of truth keep telling the truth.
Thanks, California is our first audit, more countries and topics to come!
Being the best in the world at what you do and not being allowed to do it is...not the greatest job. ;-)
Execs are paid in stock, the only consequence that would matter is missing revenue projections for 2 quarters in a row, that's yet to happen.
So this is the first audit in our Global Privacy Audit, we're going to keep going. California was the warm up, we're going world-wide with this, our technology scales 1:1 with theirs.
This report relies on several year old technology on our part, our more cutting systems are a few years beyond SOTA, and I can there's a lot more under the surface.
The only reason I ever click reject is to open the devtools and count the ads cookies still set. I managed to turn that hobby into https://webxray.ai as a business.
Yes, only true solutions are network layer severing.
Still waiting on a public recognition from a company I helped quietly fix a serious problem. I'm generally on the side of helping people fix, revealing what's going on publicly isn't our first preference. (And to the…
Dog fighting is a type of blood sport that turns game and fighting dogs against each other in a physical fight, often to the death, for the purposes of gambling or entertainment to the spectators.[1] In rural areas,…
I’m used to a quick fire response format for legal questioning. My words are carefully chosen, but I do reply quickly because I played every question in my head in advance. The dig on downvotes however was intentionally…
We don’t process it, not our decorator.
Max is a lawyer, I'm an engineer. ;-)
Oh, I very much am not.
That's why webXray (https://webxray.ai) has perfected forensic privacy auditing - we catch every code change that has visible traces. I'll catch the same thing any way you do it - cookies, local storage, js obfuscated…
Cookies serve a lot of valuable purposes, it's important to disambiguate.
Appreciated, means a lot. I'm not surprised at the downvotes, but someday we all have to look in the mirror and decide if we like what we see, but it's easier to downvote in the meantime.
We run scientific audits that provide evidence of specific data transfers under specific network conditions.
Ha, the question is always "which humans"!
For legal work you need a controlled forensic environment, this is evidence gathering in the same way a crime scene is. We've developed a lot of proprietary methods to ensure clean-room conditions. That's not to say the…
That concept is applicable to the European Union, doesn't apply in California.
2 quarters. ;-)
To quote our report: At webXray we are experts in tracking technologies, and we work closely with in-house counsel, defense, plaintiff firms, and regulators. However, we are not lawyers ourselves, thus nothing in this…
No idea, I thought it was a valid question and we go to great lengths in our methodology for this reason. The audits we supply for enterprise are highly specific as to cookie purpose for this reason: https://webxray.ai
That's their decision, our report is very factually designed: https://globalprivacyaudit.org
And the tellers of truth keep telling the truth.
Thanks, California is our first audit, more countries and topics to come!
Being the best in the world at what you do and not being allowed to do it is...not the greatest job. ;-)
Execs are paid in stock, the only consequence that would matter is missing revenue projections for 2 quarters in a row, that's yet to happen.
So this is the first audit in our Global Privacy Audit, we're going to keep going. California was the warm up, we're going world-wide with this, our technology scales 1:1 with theirs.
This report relies on several year old technology on our part, our more cutting systems are a few years beyond SOTA, and I can there's a lot more under the surface.
The only reason I ever click reject is to open the devtools and count the ads cookies still set. I managed to turn that hobby into https://webxray.ai as a business.
Yes, only true solutions are network layer severing.
Still waiting on a public recognition from a company I helped quietly fix a serious problem. I'm generally on the side of helping people fix, revealing what's going on publicly isn't our first preference. (And to the…