Groups | Search | Server Info | Login | Register
Groups > netscape.public.mozilla.browser > #4
| From | Robert Riches <spamtrap42@jacob21819.net> |
|---|---|
| Newsgroups | netscape.public.mozilla.browser |
| Subject | how does a cookie (google.com NID) get set by visiting about:blank? |
| Date | 2017-03-11 21:40 +0000 |
| Organization | none-at-all |
| Message-ID | <slrnoc8rlp.dc9.spamtrap42@one.localnet> (permalink) |
In Firefox ESR 45.8.0, if I delete all cookies, close the browser, and open the browser again to "about:blank", I see a cookie for google.com named "NID" has been set. How does starting the browser and viewing a non-internet-based pseudo-page set that cookie? My main concern is that some malware might have snuck into my browser profile tree. I'm not running any extensions or plugins from Google. My operating system is Debian Linux 7/Wheezy. In case it might be related, for at least a few months I have noticed on nearly a daily basis three rejected network packets being logged with a destination IP address of 173.194.203.127 and destination port 19302. Reverse DNS says that IP address is for host pg-in-f127.1e100.net under the Google umbrella. (1e100 is scientific notation for a Googol.) Port 19302 appears to be for Google Talk Voice and Video connections. Of the three packets sent (usually) in the same second, each is sent with a source IP address corresponding to a different network interface. Only one interface has by a default route. The second interface is a hardware NIC that connects to some thin/zero-client machines. The third interface is a KVM virtual bridge (virbr0) to talk with any VMs I might be running. There is no valid reason the web browser should be sending packets on either the second or third interface. Thanks. -- Robert Riches spamtrap42@jacob21819.net (Yes, that is one of my email addresses.)
Back to netscape.public.mozilla.browser | Previous | Next | Find similar
how does a cookie (google.com NID) get set by visiting about:blank? Robert Riches <spamtrap42@jacob21819.net> - 2017-03-11 21:40 +0000
csiph-web