User Guide
Your McAfee Internet Security To-do List
118 McAfee Internet Security 5.0
Conversely, cookies can record “what you did” on a particular Web site. 
For example, you visit one of the major search engine’s Web site and 
shop for an automobile. You revisit the same Web site a few days later 
and shop for an automobile again. The following week, you turn on your 
computer and go directly the same Web site. This time you’re looking for 
the local weather forecast. As the page loads into memory, there are ads 
for autos all over the screen. The cookie retained information about your 
past actions at their Web site. The Web page displayed information 
based upon what was stored in the cookies. 
To maintain privacy on the Internet, filter cookies. This allows you to 
select only those cookies that are truly good cookies. Additionally, you 
should delete unwanted cookies as you complete an Internet session, to 
remove the footprints resulting from your travels in the digital highway.
n Block Web bugs.
Web bugs are very small graphic files, usually 1 pixel by 1 pixel in size 
(hence the term "bug" or invisible) that send messages to third parties 
about your Internet browsing habits. Third parties use this information 
to create user profiles. Web bugs have been known to capture the date 
and time the Web bug was accessed, the browser version used and even 
the IP address of the computer that received the Web bug.
To maintain your privacy against Web bugs, always block Web bugs.
n Protect your identity.
It you want to make a purchase online, do not provide personal 
information (name, address, credit card numbers) unless the Web Site 
uses Secure Sockets Layer (SSL) encryption. You can recognize secured 
sites if the Web site's URL begins with https://.
It is also makes for good practice to use software that monitors your 
Internet connection and warns you if there is an attempt to transmit 
personal information over the Internet. This type of software requires 
that you create a database of information about you and the other users 
of the computer; thus establishing a record of that which should not be 
transmitted via the Internet.
Remove records of where browsed the Internet from your computer. As 
you browse the Internet, your browser stores files in a repository called 
Temporary Internet or "cache" files. Basically, as you revisit a Web site or 
click your browser's Back button, rather than download all of the 
graphics displayed on the Web page, your browser reloads the cached 
files. In a location on your hard disk labeled History, your browser 
records all of the URLs visited as well s the URLs that you typed into 
your browser's address bar. All of these records reveal information 
about where you’ve been on the Internet.










