According to Microsoft, Google is circumventing the P3P third party cookie standard.
P3P is kind of an odd standard (complex, not user-friendly, and it requires some serious computer knowledge to know what the heck it actually does and means), but hey, what the heck. Of course, Microsoft rides on the coattails of
what happened over the weekend, and it's clear PR because
not only has this been known for years, Google is - again - not the only one doing this; Facebook, for instance, does the same thing (and heck, Microsoft's own sites were found guilty). Still, this is not acceptable, and even if it takes Microsoft PR to get there, let's hope this forces Google and Facebook to better their ways.
Member since:
2007-03-06
According Facebook's statement about P3P they apparently don't even bother with it because they consider it obsolete and not worth caring about. I guess Google are on the same boat.
Going by the posts in the TRUSTe blog, webs that implement some kind of P3P do so for the same reasons they had to add specific js conditions back in the day: so IE doesn't break on their site.