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Web applications are protected by the "same origin policy," which under normal circumstances prevents one website from exchanging information with any other website that a user may have open.
Browser security largely rests on the Same Origin Policy (SOP) to strictly separate content based on its source.
The same origin policy assumes that the user is the ultimate owner of a cookie.
Callaghan et al.'s approach was driven by constraints imposed by the same origin policy.
The same origin policy for cookies as it is currently implemented may be too permissive in some cases.
In many cases, however, the same origin policy imposes unnecessary limitations on Web site developers and forces them to implement complex and expensive workarounds.
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These Firefox browser extensions enforce a same-origin policy on cache and visited links.
We address this problem by refining the general notion of a "same-origin" policy and by designing and implementing two browser extensions that apply a same-origin policy to the browser cache and visited links.
The same-origin policy prevents scripts on a page from communicating with servers on a different domain from the page.
One of the foundational concepts in web security is the cookie same-origin policy: cookies can only be read and modified by the domain that set them.
If domains collaborate they can trivially circumvent the same-origin policy and share cookies with each other; this practice is called "cookie syncing". Cookie syncing often raises privacy concerns.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com