<!--
- Copyright © 2016-2017 Soren Stoutner <soren@stoutner.com>.
+ Copyright © 2016-2018 Soren Stoutner <soren@stoutner.com>.
This file is part of Privacy Browser <https://www.stoutner.com/privacy-browser>.
<head>
<meta charset="UTF-8">
- <link rel="stylesheet" href="css/dark_theme.css">
+ <link rel="stylesheet" href="../css/dark_theme.css">
</head>
<body>
- <h3><img class="title" src="images/cookie_blue_dark.png"> First-Party Cookies</h3>
+ <h3><img class="title" src="../shared_images/cookie_blue_dark.png"> First-Party Cookies</h3>
<p>First-party cookies are set by the website in the URL bar at the top of the page.</p>
a website can maintain a user logged in as they move from page to page on the site, but if a particular website has chosen to
implement logins in that way, enabling first-party cookies on that site will be the only way to use the functionality.</p>
- <p>If first-party cookies are enabled but JavaScript is disabled, the privacy icon will be yellow <img class="inline" src="images/warning.png">
+ <p>If first-party cookies are enabled but JavaScript is disabled, the privacy icon will be yellow <img class="inline" src="../shared_images/warning.png">
as a warning.</p>
- <h3><img class="title" src="images/cookie_blue_dark.png"> Third-Party Cookies</h3>
+ <h3><img class="title" src="../shared_images/cookie_blue_dark.png"> Third-Party Cookies</h3>
<p>Third-party cookies are set by portions of a website that are loaded from servers different from the URL at the top of the page.
For example, most website that have advertisements load them from a third-party ad broker, like Google’s
between first-party and third-party cookies</a>. Thus, enabling first-party cookies will also enable third-party cookies.</p>
- <h3><img class="title" src="images/ic_web_blue_dark.png"> DOM Storage</h3>
+ <h3><img class="title" src="../shared_images/ic_web_blue_dark.png"> DOM Storage</h3>
<p>Document Object Model storage, also known as web storage, is like cookies on steroids. Whereas the maximum combined storage size for all cookies from
a single URL is 4 kilobytes, DOM storage can hold <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Web_storage#Storage_size">megabytes per site</a>.
Because DOM storage uses JavaScript to read and write data, enabling it will do nothing unless JavaScript is also enabled.</p>
- <h3><img class="title" src="images/ic_subtitles_blue_dark.png"> Form Data</h3>
+ <h3><img class="title" src="../shared_images/ic_subtitles_blue_dark.png"> Form Data</h3>
<p>Form data contains information typed into web forms, like user names, addresses, phone numbers, etc., and lists them in a drop-down box on future visits.
Unlike the other forms of local storage, form data is not sent to the web server without specific user interaction.</p>