A cookie is information that a Web site
puts on your hard disk so that it can remember something about you at a later
time. (More technically, it is information for future use that is stored by the
server on the client side of a client/server communication.) Typically, a cookie
records your preferences when using a particular site. Using the Web's Hypertext
Transfer Protocol (HTTP), each request for a Web page is independent of all other
requests. For this reason, the Web page server has no memory of what pages it
has sent to a user previously or anything about your previous visits. A cookie
is a mechanism that allows the server to store its own information about a user
on the user's own computer. You can view the cookies that have been stored on
your hard disk (although the content stored in each cookie may not make much sense
to you). The location of the cookies depends on the browser. Internet Explorer
stores each cookie as a separate file under a Windows subdirectory. Netscape stores
all cookies in a single cookies.txt fle. Opera stores them in a single cookies.dat
file.
Cookies are commonly used to rotate the banner ads that a site sends so that it
doesn't keep sending the same ad as it sends you a succession of requested pages.
They can also be used to customize pages for you based on your browser type or
other information you may have provided the Web site. Web users must agree to
let cookies be saved for them, but, in general, it helps Web sites to serve users
better.