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Clarify implicit CSP directives in privacy policy

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Rohan Kumar 2022-06-10 19:22:55 -07:00
parent c41e602ed1
commit 0e86aa6ba7
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2 changed files with 2 additions and 2 deletions

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@ -91,7 +91,7 @@ By default, web browsers may share pages a user visits with third parties by loa
By default, web browsers may share arbitrary information with a server through HTTP headers; these headers could include fingerprintable information unintentionally (client-hints, do-not-track) or intentionally (Chromium's upcoming advertising identifiers). I do not log any HTTP headers not explicitly mentioned in the "Web server logs" section, but I cannot prevent user agents from sending a header ahead of time. By default, web browsers may share arbitrary information with a server through HTTP headers; these headers could include fingerprintable information unintentionally (client-hints, do-not-track) or intentionally (Chromium's upcoming advertising identifiers). I do not log any HTTP headers not explicitly mentioned in the "Web server logs" section, but I cannot prevent user agents from sending a header ahead of time.
By default, web browsers can share near-arbitrary identifying data with a server by executing near-arbitrary JavaScript, or store this information for future transmission. I have disabled this behavior with a "Content-Security-Policy" HTTP header that forbids script loading ("script-src: none"), script execution ("sandbox"), and making connections for any purpose other than downloading a page a user navigated to ("connect-src"). By default, web browsers can share near-arbitrary identifying data with a server by executing near-arbitrary JavaScript, or store this information for future transmission. I have disabled this behavior with a "Content-Security-Policy" HTTP header. It contains explicit and implicit directives that forbid script loading ("script-src: none"), script execution ("sandbox"), and making connections for any purpose other than downloading a page a user navigated to ("connect-src").
By default, user agents using HTTPS may contact a certificate authority to check the revocation status of an TLS certificate. I have disabled and replaced this behavior by including an "OCSP Must-Staple" directive in the TLS certificates used by my Web servers. By default, user agents using HTTPS may contact a certificate authority to check the revocation status of an TLS certificate. I have disabled and replaced this behavior by including an "OCSP Must-Staple" directive in the TLS certificates used by my Web servers.

View file

@ -91,7 +91,7 @@ By default, web browsers may share pages a user visits with third parties by loa
By default, web browsers may share arbitrary information with a server through HTTP headers; these headers could include fingerprintable information unintentionally (client-hints, do-not-track) or intentionally (Chromium's upcoming advertising identifiers). I do not log any HTTP headers not explicitly mentioned in the "Web server logs" section, but I cannot prevent user agents from sending a header ahead of time. By default, web browsers may share arbitrary information with a server through HTTP headers; these headers could include fingerprintable information unintentionally (client-hints, do-not-track) or intentionally (Chromium's upcoming advertising identifiers). I do not log any HTTP headers not explicitly mentioned in the "Web server logs" section, but I cannot prevent user agents from sending a header ahead of time.
By default, web browsers can share near-arbitrary identifying data with a server by executing near-arbitrary JavaScript, or store this information for future transmission. I have disabled this behavior with a `Content-Security-Policy` HTTP header that forbids script loading (`script-src: none`), script execution (`sandbox`), and making connections for any purpose other than downloading a page a user navigated to (`connect-src`). By default, web browsers can share near-arbitrary identifying data with a server by executing near-arbitrary JavaScript, or store this information for future transmission. I have disabled this behavior with a `Content-Security-Policy` HTTP header. It contains explicit and implicit directives that forbid script loading (`script-src: none`), script execution (`sandbox`), and making connections for any purpose other than downloading a page a user navigated to (`connect-src`).
By default, user agents using HTTPS may contact a certificate authority to check the revocation status of an TLS certificate. I have disabled and replaced this behavior by including an "OCSP Must-Staple" directive in the TLS certificates used by my Web servers. By default, user agents using HTTPS may contact a certificate authority to check the revocation status of an TLS certificate. I have disabled and replaced this behavior by including an "OCSP Must-Staple" directive in the TLS certificates used by my Web servers.