It’s not even “Incognito” (what a misnomer too), this is a Gecko-based browser
“One vote per IP-address” - So they already tackled the problem that people can vote more then once.
Straight-up asshole design.
Cookies are not evil per se… but data mining companies made them like that.
I’m administrating an online store and cookies are responsible for the customer’s cart, plus their user session / logged in state.
As an admin I adhere to the “golden rule”, thus there are no creepy trackers on store. I don’t like them and I don’t want customers to face the same thing on websites that I manage.
That said, cookies are needed for user session & fraud protection. Instead of nuking cookies we shall kick the trackers out.
There’s an extension that allows you to hide incognito mode from websites called Hide Private Mode I’m not sure why browsers don’t do this by default (maybe it’s some funny compliance thing) it would greatly improve privacy.
I feel like for straw poll it’s more valid, they probably do it to try and avoid people voting more than once.
Honestly people should just set there browser to clear cookies on close
It would be nice if you could whitelist sites for cookies. That way you can stay logged into things like email.
You can, on firefox at least. No add ons required it’s a browser feature.
Is that Firefox Focus? Because if yes, them that counts as “incognito mode” too.
It’s IceRaven, but I have it set to permanent private mode. I dont need to deal with cookies of every shitty site.
It just how internet works, dude. Most of the sites can’t work without cookies at all.
We need to be teaching sites that working that way is unacceptable, not accepting it.
This is the way
I mean, of all sites, polls make the most sense to require cookies to avoid duplicate votes.
Cookies are really inappropriate for this use…
You need to track the user for a poll. Sessions don’t work since private browsing enables duplicate votes. Tracking the IP can block users from the same network/wifi. Cookies get auto-sent and browser storage is only clientside. Really not many more options aside from making an account on a site and logging in. I find it a pretty reasonable solution actually.
Cookies fall short just the same as sessions. you’re asking the user to pinkie promise they won’t clear their cookies / modify them.
An account seems the most logical. You need to avoid duplicates ; it’s not really about privacy here. You’ll only make a tradeoff between accomplishing no duplicates and letting users do what they want.