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  2. Jan 30, 2014 · A properly designed browser will not allow a website to access another website's cookies, as this would violate the cross-domain policy and be a major security issue.

  3. The easiest work-around is to pass login/credential information from website A to website B and have website B set a seperate cookie. For example, after logging into website A you could have them quickly redirected to website B with an encrypted querystring.

  4. Sep 13, 2022 · In some cases - where sites are expected to handle requests originating from other sites (any other sites, you don't get to choose) and those requests need to have cookies - it must be turned off. Samesite is still relatively new, and not universally adopted.

  5. In short, a browser cookie will not be read across browsers as long as you quit a browser before using another. A supercookie is generally stored in macromedia folder in #sharedobjects, but can get into other places as well.

  6. Jul 5, 2020 · Yes, there are different ways where you can allow cookie set by one domain use/read by other domains, such are encoding cookie into url.

  7. A cookie (also known as a web cookie or browser cookie) is a small piece of data a server sends to a user's web browser. The browser may store cookies, create new cookies, modify existing ones, and send them back to the same server with later requests.

  8. Jul 1, 2022 · A cookie is a small text file stored on your hard drive by web pages you visit. The file - and the information in the file - is generated by the server-side application running the web site. The server also has access to the cookie it gave you (but not to cookies created by other websites).

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