Drink Mouse Milk with your cookies, and you will be fine, just a little loser.
Thanks awesome.. that description was easily siphoned by this ol school brain. Makes sense now and I now know why when I’m online.. wherever I go, ads pop up that catch my attention.To understand cookies, you need to know this: once you click the "login" button on this website, you are sending your username/password to the server. Then later on, when you click on a link, or post a message in thread, the website has no way to know that you are the same guy that logged-in a few seconds ago.
Think of it as if every action you do on the website would be a phone call. You first call to give your username/password, then they tell you: OK, yeah, we acknowledge you are who you say you are.
Then you call back to say "I wanna post something". They'd be like "who are you?"
So to make this work, after you call to login, they reply with "OK, yeah, we acknowledge you are who you say you are. Your reference number is abcd1234".
Then when you wanna post something, you say "Hey, my ref number is abcd1234, I wanna post something". They reply with "ok, we have that ref in our books, it shows that you are the guy that successfully logged in earlier, so we will allow you to post"
So every subsequent calls you make, you give them your reference number. That's the cookie. With this, they can look in their book and say "oh yeah, ref number abcd1234 was given to that guy who successfully logged in earlier. So we trust him since he's the only one who knows about that ref number".
You can see how this is absolutely needed to make the website work.
It becomes bad, when they start saving info about you. They can build a database that holds info like "user with ref number abcd1234 looks at posts involving B series tractors all the time. So we will display ads for attachments about B series when he visits the site." And it can get a lot more messy than this because they can sell your info to other companies. And when they send your "ref number" to google ads, it allows google to track you too.
Cookies are required. We need them. And companies can abuse of them. These new laws make no sense because they don't solve anything. They don't address the issue.
BTW, the option of disabling cookies has always been a setting you can configure in your browser (even in the browsers in the '90s). But disabling it always makes it impossible to login to your bank website, forum or anything else.
Would that make it an 2awesome explanation? (not to be confused with too awesome). Or awesome^2?Agreed, that was an awesome explanation!