- I have seen certain links on the internet, where, - The text reads “example.com”, and when you hover over it, the little textbox at the bottom left also reads “example.com” - but if you click to open the link in a new tab or if you right click and copy the link and paste it in the address bar, it’s actually a completely different link - it’s shady af! and im wondering if it’s the same thing as what this article is describing, and if not, how they are able to do it? - Basically override the default event for an anchor tag and use js to open a new tab to a given link. 
- My guess would be JavaScript 
 
- Wouldn’t it be easier to have a blacklist for cookie domains? - @fmstrat @boredsquirrel 
 There is already: NoScript and predefined lists. Or Pi-Hole.- But thats my point… Why clear them when you can just block them to begin with? 
- Noscript manages cookies? Are cookies only loaded if you enable javascript? - PiHole is obviously not a solution… 
 
 
- I don’t get why companies pull such shady crap to get behavior data. 99% of it is useless and never even is used to make improvements to products or processes. - They’re effectively crackheads 
- Clearly it isn’t so useless, or they wouldn’t do it. - More to the point, the company using shady means to collect the data does not need to care if the data is useful, just that it’s marketable. - It’s like grifting, but also a pyramid scheme. 
 
- A lot gets used. A lot doesn’t. The technology is designed with trust in mind that it won’t be abused. It completely is. We should really be redesigning protocols to not be intrusive. A lot of information is given that is no longer needed to be functional. 
 
 




