"Deloptes" wrote
| According my understanding there is no "injection", but "loading" will be
| more appropriate as the operators of a site do allow advertisements and
| similar to be loaded from third party on the web site. You usually consent
| with this when visiting the site.
|
That's putting a good face on it. I never consent to visit
Doubleclick and ask for an ad. Most people have no idea
that's going on. They think they're visiting a webpage at
acme.com. They have no idea that acme.com is feeding them
to the wolves, and are in no position to consent. Most people
don't even know what browser they're using.
Yes, injection is a misleading term. On the other hand,
it's also misleading to say a website owner allows ads
to be loaded from 3rd-party websites. They don't "allow" it!
They write it into their pages, in order to make money,
hijacking your browser to go visit various ad and spyware
companies without your permission. And they do their best
to hide that ugly truth from visitors. By what right do they
do such a thing? They have no right to trick you into visiting
other websites. The simple fact is that they can get away
with it, so they do. Why can they get away with it? Because
visitors don't understand that it's happening and the concepts
to explain it are difficult. For the average person it's all a
black box.
| You also seems to not accept the fact that there are dynamic web pages
| generated by webserver extentions such as the apaches php extention.
| Please, note that whatever methodology is used, the visitor of a web site
| receives a HTML sent to the browser. The dynamic part is only the
| generation of this HTML opposed to the static content you pretend to be
the
| only "true" HTML.
That's a bit confusing. The page you get is "static" insofar
as it's a file. It may or may not be assembled when you
ask for it. It may or may not be customized to suit your
browser, screen, etc.
Traditionally, dynamic refers to client-side script, as in
DHTML or dynamic HTML. Everything that moves or changes,
aside from a few CSS elements, is script, which makes the
page DHTML.
So if I give you a page customized with PHP, which has no
script, that's a static page. If I give you a file off my server
full of javascript, that's a dynamic page. Your description
is, at best, the webmaster's point of view.
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