From 2434a69cabd383f2e9c8c6f55fd71e9a2ed2ce8f Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: "cotter%netscape.com" Date: Tue, 4 Jun 2002 05:38:17 +0000 Subject: [PATCH] ongoing help content updates per bugzilla 122806 & ADT, r=oeschger; misc formatting, privacy updates from legal git-svn-id: svn://10.0.0.236/trunk@122655 18797224-902f-48f8-a5cc-f745e15eee43 --- .../locale/en-US/certs_prefs_help.html | 8 ++--- .../locale/en-US/certs_prefs_help.xhtml | 8 ++--- .../help/resources/locale/en-US/glossary.html | 6 ++-- .../resources/locale/en-US/glossary.xhtml | 6 ++-- .../resources/locale/en-US/help_help.html | 19 +++++----- .../resources/locale/en-US/help_help.xhtml | 19 +++++----- .../resources/locale/en-US/mail_sec_help.html | 23 ++++++------ .../locale/en-US/mail_sec_help.xhtml | 23 ++++++------ .../resources/locale/en-US/privacy_help.html | 35 ++++++++++++------- .../resources/locale/en-US/privacy_help.xhtml | 35 ++++++++++++------- .../resources/locale/en-US/privsec_help.html | 4 +-- .../resources/locale/en-US/privsec_help.xhtml | 4 +-- .../help/resources/locale/en-US/ssl_help.html | 8 ++--- .../resources/locale/en-US/ssl_help.xhtml | 8 ++--- .../locale/en-US/using_priv_help.html | 19 +++++----- .../locale/en-US/using_priv_help.xhtml | 19 +++++----- 16 files changed, 120 insertions(+), 124 deletions(-) diff --git a/mozilla/extensions/help/resources/locale/en-US/certs_prefs_help.html b/mozilla/extensions/help/resources/locale/en-US/certs_prefs_help.html index 0ec2f4ed60e..861e23139ff 100644 --- a/mozilla/extensions/help/resources/locale/en-US/certs_prefs_help.html +++ b/mozilla/extensions/help/resources/locale/en-US/certs_prefs_help.html @@ -17,7 +17,7 @@

This section describes how to set your certificate preferences and how to use the Certificate Manager, Device Manager, and other dialog boxes related to certificates. -

For step-by-step descriptions of various tasks related to certificates, see Using Certificates section .

+

For step-by-step descriptions of various tasks related to certificates, see Using Certificates.

@@ -51,8 +51,8 @@

Some web sites require you to identify yourself with a certificate. The option you select here determines how Navigator identifies the certificate to present among those you may have on file:

 

@@ -75,7 +75,7 @@ security device, and you can use additional security devices, such as smart card
-

16 May 2002

+

3 June 2002

Copyright © 1994-2002 Netscape Communications Corporation.

diff --git a/mozilla/extensions/help/resources/locale/en-US/certs_prefs_help.xhtml b/mozilla/extensions/help/resources/locale/en-US/certs_prefs_help.xhtml index 0ec2f4ed60e..861e23139ff 100644 --- a/mozilla/extensions/help/resources/locale/en-US/certs_prefs_help.xhtml +++ b/mozilla/extensions/help/resources/locale/en-US/certs_prefs_help.xhtml @@ -17,7 +17,7 @@

This section describes how to set your certificate preferences and how to use the Certificate Manager, Device Manager, and other dialog boxes related to certificates. -

For step-by-step descriptions of various tasks related to certificates, see Using Certificates section .

+

For step-by-step descriptions of various tasks related to certificates, see Using Certificates.

@@ -51,8 +51,8 @@

Some web sites require you to identify yourself with a certificate. The option you select here determines how Navigator identifies the certificate to present among those you may have on file:

 

@@ -75,7 +75,7 @@ security device, and you can use additional security devices, such as smart card
-

16 May 2002

+

3 June 2002

Copyright © 1994-2002 Netscape Communications Corporation.

diff --git a/mozilla/extensions/help/resources/locale/en-US/glossary.html b/mozilla/extensions/help/resources/locale/en-US/glossary.html index b39499f63bc..d94656a15a3 100644 --- a/mozilla/extensions/help/resources/locale/en-US/glossary.html +++ b/mozilla/extensions/help/resources/locale/en-US/glossary.html @@ -218,7 +218,7 @@ Federal Information Processing Standards Publications (FIPS PUBS) 140-1 is a US

Hypertext Markup Language (HTML).  The document format used for Web pages. The HTML standard defines tags, or codes, used to define the text layout, fonts, style, images, and other elements that make up a web page.

-

implicit consent.  Used to describe privacy settings that allow web sites to gather information about you, for example by means of cookies and on-line forms, unless you explicitly choose to withhold your consent by selecting an option on a page that the web site provides for that purpose. Your consent is not requested when the information is actually gathered.

+

implicit consent.  Used to describe privacy settings that may allow web sites to gather information about you, for example by means of cookies and on-line forms, unless you explicitly choose to withhold your consent by selecting an option on a page that the web site provides for that purpose. Your consent may not be requested when the information is actually gathered.

Internet Message Access Protocol (IMAP). A standard mail server protocol that allows you to store all your messages and any changes to them on the server rather than on your computer's hard disk. Using IMAP rather than POP saves disk space and allows you to acess your entire mailbox, including sent mail, drafts, and custom folders, from any location. Using an IMAP server over a modem is generally faster than using a POP mail server, since you initially download message headers only. Not all ISPs support IMAP.

@@ -320,7 +320,7 @@ A program on your computer that manages cryptographic services such as encryptio

-Platform for Privacy Preferences (P3P). An industry standard published by the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) designed to help users to gain more control over the use of personal information by Web sites they visit. For information about using cookies with web sites that support this standard, see Setting Privacy Levels. For general information on the standard itself, see the online document P3P Public Overview.

+Platform for Privacy Preferences (P3P). A standard published by the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) designed to help users to gain more control over the use of personal information by Web sites they visit. For information about using cookies with web sites that support this standard, see Setting Privacy Levels. For general information on the standard itself, see the online document P3P Public Overview.

plug-in. A type of helper application that adds new capabilities to your browser, such as the ability to play audio or video clips. Unlike other kinds of helper applications, a plug-in application installs itself into the Plugins directory within the main browser installation directory and typically can be opened within the browser itself (internally). For example, an audio plug-in lets you listen to audio files on a web page or in an e-mail message. Macromedia Flash Player and Java are both examples of plug-in applications.

@@ -539,7 +539,7 @@ Confident reliance on a person or other entity. In the context of Hypertext Markup Language (HTML).  The document format used for Web pages. The HTML standard defines tags, or codes, used to define the text layout, fonts, style, images, and other elements that make up a web page.

-

implicit consent.  Used to describe privacy settings that allow web sites to gather information about you, for example by means of cookies and on-line forms, unless you explicitly choose to withhold your consent by selecting an option on a page that the web site provides for that purpose. Your consent is not requested when the information is actually gathered.

+

implicit consent.  Used to describe privacy settings that may allow web sites to gather information about you, for example by means of cookies and on-line forms, unless you explicitly choose to withhold your consent by selecting an option on a page that the web site provides for that purpose. Your consent may not be requested when the information is actually gathered.

Internet Message Access Protocol (IMAP). A standard mail server protocol that allows you to store all your messages and any changes to them on the server rather than on your computer's hard disk. Using IMAP rather than POP saves disk space and allows you to acess your entire mailbox, including sent mail, drafts, and custom folders, from any location. Using an IMAP server over a modem is generally faster than using a POP mail server, since you initially download message headers only. Not all ISPs support IMAP.

@@ -320,7 +320,7 @@ A program on your computer that manages cryptographic services such as encryptio

-Platform for Privacy Preferences (P3P). An industry standard published by the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) designed to help users to gain more control over the use of personal information by Web sites they visit. For information about using cookies with web sites that support this standard, see Setting Privacy Levels. For general information on the standard itself, see the online document P3P Public Overview.

+Platform for Privacy Preferences (P3P). A standard published by the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) designed to help users to gain more control over the use of personal information by Web sites they visit. For information about using cookies with web sites that support this standard, see Setting Privacy Levels. For general information on the standard itself, see the online document P3P Public Overview.

plug-in. A type of helper application that adds new capabilities to your browser, such as the ability to play audio or video clips. Unlike other kinds of helper applications, a plug-in application installs itself into the Plugins directory within the main browser installation directory and typically can be opened within the browser itself (internally). For example, an audio plug-in lets you listen to audio files on a web page or in an e-mail message. Macromedia Flash Player and Java are both examples of plug-in applications.

@@ -539,7 +539,7 @@ Confident reliance on a person or other entity. In the context of Help and Support Center.

@@ -35,6 +35,8 @@ + +

Finding the Topic You Want

When you're viewing the Help window, click the tabs in the left frame to view the Help contents in different ways: @@ -44,7 +46,7 @@

Click a topic to read about it. Double-click to see its subtopics.

If you can't find the topic you want, click the Search or Index tab. -

  • Search lets you search the built-in Mozilla Help. +
  • Search lets you search the built-in Netscape 7.0 Help.

    Type a word or phrase and press Enter to see related topics. Then click the topic you want to read about.

    If your Search doesn't return any topics, try typing fewer words or a different combination of words. @@ -82,7 +84,7 @@

  • Click the Home button to see the Help and Support Center, including links to support options and web-based resources. -

    If you're having trouble keeping the Help window visible while you're following instructions, click Mozilla Help in the Windows toolbar to bring it to the front again. +

    If you're having trouble keeping the Help window visible while you're following instructions, click Netscape 7.0 Help in the Windows toolbar to bring it to the front again.

    Alternatively, print the instructions you want to follow:

  • @@ -35,6 +35,8 @@ + +

    Finding the Topic You Want

    When you're viewing the Help window, click the tabs in the left frame to view the Help contents in different ways: @@ -44,7 +46,7 @@

    Click a topic to read about it. Double-click to see its subtopics.

    If you can't find the topic you want, click the Search or Index tab. -

  • Search lets you search the built-in Mozilla Help. +
  • Search lets you search the built-in Netscape 7.0 Help.

    Type a word or phrase and press Enter to see related topics. Then click the topic you want to read about.

    If your Search doesn't return any topics, try typing fewer words or a different combination of words. @@ -82,7 +84,7 @@

  • Click the Home button to see the Help and Support Center, including links to support options and web-based resources. -

    If you're having trouble keeping the Help window visible while you're following instructions, click Mozilla Help in the Windows toolbar to bring it to the front again. +

    If you're having trouble keeping the Help window visible while you're following instructions, click Netscape 7.0 Help in the Windows toolbar to bring it to the front again.

    Alternatively, print the instructions you want to follow:

  • @@ -52,6 +52,7 @@

    In this section:

    What Information Does My Browser Give to a Web Site?

    What Are Cookies, and How Do They Work?

    +

    How Can I Control Web Pages in Email Messages?

    How Do I Make Sure Unauthorized People Don't Use Information About Me?

    @@ -79,7 +80,7 @@ use the French version of Netscape 6.2.3 on a Windows 2000 computer.

    Your IP address can be either temporary or fixed (static). -

    If you connect to the Internet through a standard modem that's attached to your phone line, then your Internet service provider (ISP) assigns you a temporary IP address each time you log on. You use the temporary IP address for the duration of your Internet session. Each ISP has many IP addresses, and they assign the addresses at random to users. A web site can tell which ISP a temporary IP address comes from, but little else. +

    If you connect to the Internet through a standard modem that's attached to your phone line, then your Internet service provider (ISP) may assign you a temporary IP address each time you log on. You use the temporary IP address for the duration of your Internet session. Each ISP has many IP addresses, and they assign the addresses at random to users. A web site can tell which ISP a temporary IP address comes from, but little else.

    Important: Your IP address is not your email address. Your email address provides personally identifiable information about you much more readily than a temporary IP address can. @@ -110,7 +111,6 @@ which of its pages you came from.

     

    -

    How Do Sites Use Cookie Information?

    @@ -119,7 +119,7 @@ For example, if you typically search for local weather or purchase books at a we

    Reputable web sites publish privacy policies that describe how they use the information they receive. -

    When in doubt, check a web site's privacy policy before permitting a cookie to be set and before providing any personal information (such as your name and email address). To learn how to do this, see Viewing Privacy Policies. +

    You can check a web site's privacy policy to see what information it collects, how that information is used, and what choices you have regarding the use of that information. To learn how to do this, see Viewing Privacy Policies.

    For information on how to manage cookies with the aid of published privacy policies, see Setting Privacy Levels.

    @@ -132,21 +132,32 @@ For example, if you typically search for local weather or purchase books at a we

    What Are Third-Party Cookies?

    -

    If your browser stores a site's cookie, it will return the cookie only to that particular site. Your browser will not provide one site with cookies set by another. Since a web site can only receive its own cookies, it can keep learn about your activities while you are at that site but not your activities in general while surfing the Web. +

    If your browser stores a site's cookie, it will return the cookie only to that particular site. Your browser will not provide one site with cookies set by another. Since a web site can only receive its own cookies, it can learn about your activities while you are at that site but not your activities in general while surfing the Web. -

    But sometimes one web site displays content that is hosted on another web site. That content can be anything from an image to text or an advertisement. In such cases, the second web site also has the ability to store a cookie in your browser, even though you did not visit that site directly. +

    But sometimes a web site displays content that is hosted on another web site. That content can be anything from an image to text or an advertisement. The second web site that hosts such elements also has the ability to store a cookie in your browser, even though you don't visit it directly.

    Cookies that are stored by the site other than the one you -think you are visiting are called third-party cookies or foreign cookies. Web sites sometimes use third-party cookies with web beacons, which are special images that help sites count users, track email responses, or customize your browsing experience. Web beacons are also known as as web bugs or transparent GIFs. +think you are visiting are called third-party cookies or foreign cookies. Web sites sometimes use third-party cookies with transparent GIFs, which are special images that help sites count users, track email responses, or customize your browsing experience. (Transparent GIFs are also known as web beacons or web bugs.)

    If you want, you can adjust your cookie preferences so that sites can store ordinary cookies but not third-party ones. -

    You can also disable cookies, images, and JavaScript completely for web pages that are received as part of email messages. For details, see the following sections: +

     

    + + + +

    How Can I Control Web Pages in Email Messages?

    + +

    You can disable cookies, images, JavaScript, and plug-ins completely for web pages that are received as part of email messages. + +

    While it may be convenient to enable some or all of these capabilities when you're browsing the web, they may not be necessary in single web pages sent as attachments to messages. + +

    For information on enabling or disabling cookies, images, JavaScript, and plug-ins in email messages, see the following sections: +

    @@ -154,7 +165,7 @@ think you are visiting are called third-party cookies or foreign cooki

    How Can I Make Sure Unauthorized People Don't Use Information About Me?

    -

    The best way to keep your information private is to be cautious about providing it to others. The Internet is a public network. When you send your name, phone number, address, and other personal information over the network (via a web page, email, or any other method), it is possible, though unlikely, that someone else can intercept it.

    +

    The best way to keep your information private is to be cautious about providing it to others. The Internet is a public network. When you send your name, phone number, address, and other personal information over the network (via a web page, email, or any other method), it is possible, though not likely, that someone else may be able to intercept it.

    If a web site asks for information about you, you should always check the site's privacy policy before proceeding. Here are some questions you might ask about a web site's privacy policy: @@ -186,7 +197,7 @@ think you are visiting are called third-party cookies or foreign cooki


    -

    30 May 2002

    +

    3 June 2002


    Copyright © 1998-2002 Netscape Communications Corporation.

    diff --git a/mozilla/extensions/help/resources/locale/en-US/privacy_help.xhtml b/mozilla/extensions/help/resources/locale/en-US/privacy_help.xhtml index f75c22c9a84..37ac2424ab9 100644 --- a/mozilla/extensions/help/resources/locale/en-US/privacy_help.xhtml +++ b/mozilla/extensions/help/resources/locale/en-US/privacy_help.xhtml @@ -13,7 +13,7 @@

    Using Privacy Features

    -

    Your browser includes features you can use to safeguard the privacy and security of your personal information at all times. The sections that follow describe how Netscape helps you control cookies, passwords, forms, and images while you are surfing the Internet. +

    Your browser includes features you can use to safeguard the privacy and security of your personal information. The sections that follow describe how your browser can help you control cookies, passwords, forms, and images while you are surfing the Internet.

    Some web sites publish their privacy policies according to the Platform for Privacy Preferences (P3P) standard. For information on how to customize your browser based on this standard, see Setting Privacy Levels. @@ -44,7 +44,7 @@


    Privacy on the Internet

    -

    This section summarizes some background information about privacy on the Internet. It also describes several things you can do to safeguard your own privacy.

    +

    This section summarizes some background information about privacy on the Internet. It also describes several things you can do to help safeguard your own privacy.

    @@ -52,6 +52,7 @@

    In this section:

    What Information Does My Browser Give to a Web Site?

    What Are Cookies, and How Do They Work?

    +

    How Can I Control Web Pages in Email Messages?

    How Do I Make Sure Unauthorized People Don't Use Information About Me?

    @@ -79,7 +80,7 @@ use the French version of Netscape 6.2.3 on a Windows 2000 computer.

    Your IP address can be either temporary or fixed (static). -

    If you connect to the Internet through a standard modem that's attached to your phone line, then your Internet service provider (ISP) assigns you a temporary IP address each time you log on. You use the temporary IP address for the duration of your Internet session. Each ISP has many IP addresses, and they assign the addresses at random to users. A web site can tell which ISP a temporary IP address comes from, but little else. +

    If you connect to the Internet through a standard modem that's attached to your phone line, then your Internet service provider (ISP) may assign you a temporary IP address each time you log on. You use the temporary IP address for the duration of your Internet session. Each ISP has many IP addresses, and they assign the addresses at random to users. A web site can tell which ISP a temporary IP address comes from, but little else.

    Important: Your IP address is not your email address. Your email address provides personally identifiable information about you much more readily than a temporary IP address can. @@ -110,7 +111,6 @@ which of its pages you came from.

     

    -

    How Do Sites Use Cookie Information?

    @@ -119,7 +119,7 @@ For example, if you typically search for local weather or purchase books at a we

    Reputable web sites publish privacy policies that describe how they use the information they receive. -

    When in doubt, check a web site's privacy policy before permitting a cookie to be set and before providing any personal information (such as your name and email address). To learn how to do this, see Viewing Privacy Policies. +

    You can check a web site's privacy policy to see what information it collects, how that information is used, and what choices you have regarding the use of that information. To learn how to do this, see Viewing Privacy Policies.

    For information on how to manage cookies with the aid of published privacy policies, see Setting Privacy Levels.

    @@ -132,21 +132,32 @@ For example, if you typically search for local weather or purchase books at a we

    What Are Third-Party Cookies?

    -

    If your browser stores a site's cookie, it will return the cookie only to that particular site. Your browser will not provide one site with cookies set by another. Since a web site can only receive its own cookies, it can keep learn about your activities while you are at that site but not your activities in general while surfing the Web. +

    If your browser stores a site's cookie, it will return the cookie only to that particular site. Your browser will not provide one site with cookies set by another. Since a web site can only receive its own cookies, it can learn about your activities while you are at that site but not your activities in general while surfing the Web. -

    But sometimes one web site displays content that is hosted on another web site. That content can be anything from an image to text or an advertisement. In such cases, the second web site also has the ability to store a cookie in your browser, even though you did not visit that site directly. +

    But sometimes a web site displays content that is hosted on another web site. That content can be anything from an image to text or an advertisement. The second web site that hosts such elements also has the ability to store a cookie in your browser, even though you don't visit it directly.

    Cookies that are stored by the site other than the one you -think you are visiting are called third-party cookies or foreign cookies. Web sites sometimes use third-party cookies with web beacons, which are special images that help sites count users, track email responses, or customize your browsing experience. Web beacons are also known as as web bugs or transparent GIFs. +think you are visiting are called third-party cookies or foreign cookies. Web sites sometimes use third-party cookies with transparent GIFs, which are special images that help sites count users, track email responses, or customize your browsing experience. (Transparent GIFs are also known as web beacons or web bugs.)

    If you want, you can adjust your cookie preferences so that sites can store ordinary cookies but not third-party ones. -

    You can also disable cookies, images, and JavaScript completely for web pages that are received as part of email messages. For details, see the following sections: +

     

    + + + +

    How Can I Control Web Pages in Email Messages?

    + +

    You can disable cookies, images, JavaScript, and plug-ins completely for web pages that are received as part of email messages. + +

    While it may be convenient to enable some or all of these capabilities when you're browsing the web, they may not be necessary in single web pages sent as attachments to messages. + +

    For information on enabling or disabling cookies, images, JavaScript, and plug-ins in email messages, see the following sections: +

    @@ -154,7 +165,7 @@ think you are visiting are called third-party cookies or foreign cooki

    How Can I Make Sure Unauthorized People Don't Use Information About Me?

    -

    The best way to keep your information private is to be cautious about providing it to others. The Internet is a public network. When you send your name, phone number, address, and other personal information over the network (via a web page, email, or any other method), it is possible, though unlikely, that someone else can intercept it.

    +

    The best way to keep your information private is to be cautious about providing it to others. The Internet is a public network. When you send your name, phone number, address, and other personal information over the network (via a web page, email, or any other method), it is possible, though not likely, that someone else may be able to intercept it.

    If a web site asks for information about you, you should always check the site's privacy policy before proceeding. Here are some questions you might ask about a web site's privacy policy: @@ -186,7 +197,7 @@ think you are visiting are called third-party cookies or foreign cooki


    -

    30 May 2002

    +

    3 June 2002


    Copyright © 1998-2002 Netscape Communications Corporation.

    diff --git a/mozilla/extensions/help/resources/locale/en-US/privsec_help.html b/mozilla/extensions/help/resources/locale/en-US/privsec_help.html index 210039e8e9f..3ddf6e4e556 100644 --- a/mozilla/extensions/help/resources/locale/en-US/privsec_help.html +++ b/mozilla/extensions/help/resources/locale/en-US/privsec_help.html @@ -13,7 +13,7 @@ -


    Privacy & Security Preferences

    +

    Privacy & Security Preferences

    The sections listed below describe the Privacy & Security preferences. To see the preference panels, follow these steps:

      @@ -46,7 +46,7 @@
      -

      16 May 2002

      +

      6 June 2002

      Copyright © 1994-2002 Netscape Communications Corporation.

      diff --git a/mozilla/extensions/help/resources/locale/en-US/privsec_help.xhtml b/mozilla/extensions/help/resources/locale/en-US/privsec_help.xhtml index 210039e8e9f..3ddf6e4e556 100644 --- a/mozilla/extensions/help/resources/locale/en-US/privsec_help.xhtml +++ b/mozilla/extensions/help/resources/locale/en-US/privsec_help.xhtml @@ -13,7 +13,7 @@ -


      Privacy & Security Preferences

      +

      Privacy & Security Preferences

      The sections listed below describe the Privacy & Security preferences. To see the preference panels, follow these steps:

        @@ -46,7 +46,7 @@
        -

        16 May 2002

        +

        6 June 2002

        Copyright © 1994-2002 Netscape Communications Corporation.

        diff --git a/mozilla/extensions/help/resources/locale/en-US/ssl_help.html b/mozilla/extensions/help/resources/locale/en-US/ssl_help.html index e881dfc1434..9a52cb0c87b 100644 --- a/mozilla/extensions/help/resources/locale/en-US/ssl_help.html +++ b/mozilla/extensions/help/resources/locale/en-US/ssl_help.html @@ -147,12 +147,8 @@ information that isn't encrypted.
        If you send unencrypted information over t

         


        -

        16 May 2002 +

        6 June 2002

        Copyright © 1994-2002 Netscape Communications Corporation.

        - - - - - + \ No newline at end of file diff --git a/mozilla/extensions/help/resources/locale/en-US/ssl_help.xhtml b/mozilla/extensions/help/resources/locale/en-US/ssl_help.xhtml index e881dfc1434..9a52cb0c87b 100644 --- a/mozilla/extensions/help/resources/locale/en-US/ssl_help.xhtml +++ b/mozilla/extensions/help/resources/locale/en-US/ssl_help.xhtml @@ -147,12 +147,8 @@ information that isn't encrypted.
        If you send unencrypted information over t

         


        -

        16 May 2002 +

        6 June 2002

        Copyright © 1994-2002 Netscape Communications Corporation.

        - - - - - + \ No newline at end of file diff --git a/mozilla/extensions/help/resources/locale/en-US/using_priv_help.html b/mozilla/extensions/help/resources/locale/en-US/using_priv_help.html index e92a140af3b..9aebae981b3 100644 --- a/mozilla/extensions/help/resources/locale/en-US/using_priv_help.html +++ b/mozilla/extensions/help/resources/locale/en-US/using_priv_help.html @@ -156,7 +156,7 @@ Using the Cookie Manager

        If you choose Reject, Flag, or Session for a given category, the Cookie Manager displays the cookie notification icon () near the lower-right corner of the browser window whenever a web site that fits the category sets a cookie. When this icon is displayed, you can click it to get information about the affected cookies. -

        "First party cookies" are cookies set by the site you are visiting. "Third party cookies," also known as foreign cookies, are set by a sites other than the one you are viewing, and are therefore considered more dangerous. +

        "First party cookies" are cookies set by the site you are visiting. "Third-party cookies," also known as foreign cookies, are set by sites other than the one you are viewing.

        For more details, see Privacy Settings. @@ -164,7 +164,6 @@ Using the Cookie Manager

        Return to beginning of section ]

         

        -

        Cookie Manager Settings

        This section describes how to set your cookie preferences and control other aspects of cookie handling. @@ -372,7 +371,7 @@ Using the Cookie Manager

        The level of privacy you set here determines how your browser treats cookies according to privacy policies published by some web sites and the settings displayed under Cookie Acceptance Policy for first-party and third-party cookies. -

        "First-party cookies" are cookies set by the site you are visiting. "Third-party cookies," also known as foreign cookies, are set by a site other than the one you are viewing, and are considered more dangerous than first party cookies. +

        "First party cookies" are cookies set by the site you are visiting. "Third-party cookies," also known as foreign cookies, are set by sites other than the one you are viewing.

        You can select one of the following privacy levels:

          @@ -416,11 +415,10 @@ Using the Cookie Manager

          Web sites are classified in four categories for each of the two types of cookies:

            -
          • Site has no privacy policy: Site does not publish any kind of privacy policy. There is no way of knowing what kinds of information such sites collect or what they do with it. In general, it's safest to reject cookies set by such sites, especially third-party cookies. -
          • Site collects personally identifiable information without your consent: Site publishes a privacy policy, but does not ask your permission when it collects personally identifiable information. If you are concerned about such information being collected without your knowledge, you should reject cookies from such sites, especially third-party cookies. +
          • Site has no privacy policy: Site does not publish any kind of privacy policy. There is no way of knowing what kinds of information such sites collect or what they do with it. +
          • Site collects personally identifiable information without your consent: Site publishes a privacy policy, but does not ask your permission when it collects personally identifiable information.
          • Site collects personally identifiable information with only your implicit consent: Site collects information about you unless you go to a web page (or use some other mechanism) to explicitly withhold your consent. -
          • Site does not collect personally identifiable information without your explicit consent: This kind of site is relatively innocuous, since you are explicitly given a chance to reject requests for personally identifiable information at some point during your interaction with the site. As for the other types of sites, third-party cookies are considered more dangerous than first party cookies. -
          +
        • Site does not collect personally identifiable information without your explicit consent: This kind of site is relatively innocuous, since you are explicitly given a chance to reject requests for personally identifiable information at some point during your interaction with the site.

         

        @@ -738,7 +736,7 @@ Using the Cookie Manager

        One way to evaluate a web site's trustworthiness is to examine its published privacy policy. Many web sites publish such policies according to the Platform for Privacy Preferences (P3P) standard. -

        A web site's privacy policy describes what kind of information the site collects, to whom it gives that information, and how it uses the information. Web sites publish privacy policies in both human-readable form and as an XML file that can be interpreted by the browser according to your Privacy Settings. +

        A web site's privacy policy describes what kind of information the site collects, to whom it gives that information, and how it uses the information. Web sites publish privacy policies in both human-readable form and as a file that can be interpreted by the browser according to your Privacy Settings.

        To view a web site's privacy policy, browse to the site and follow these steps: @@ -903,7 +901,6 @@ Using the Cookie Manager

         

        - @@ -1104,7 +1101,7 @@ site" in response to the Form Manager's request to store form data.