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#1 |
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Safari history: is Google spoofing?
Hi,
I'm not sure if this is wholly on topic and it's a bit wild but here goes. I've noticed something strange in Safari history pages when visiting sites from a Google search. As might be expected a click on one of the links on a Google search page results in a single entry in Safari's browsing history. The entry itself, however, is unexpected. There is no record of our visiting the page we thought we were going to. Instead the entry records a visit to Google. Safari's history page (Safari 5.0.3) is divided into two collumns: the title of the page last visited and the page url. In the case of our clicking a link in Google the Page Last Visited column contains the string "(no title)". In the address column the entry reads: http //www.google.co.uk/url? followed by a jumble of characters which includes the url of the page being accessed (minus the http://). Safari's history makes it look as if we have not visited the page we wanted but are instead looking at a page generated by Google. Intrigued I took a look at how this was handled in Firefox. Two history entries are created for the one link. The first is exactly as above except that instead of "(no title)" the title is "url". The second entry is the url and title of the page being accessed. Google's Chrome provides us with two entries just like Firefox. The Firefox and Chrome entries suggest that the link takes us to Google which throws up a page of its own from which it somehow calls up the page being linked to. Why then is Safari history only showing the one page? It could of course just be a feature but what if Safari were correctly reporting that the click on the link resulted in no more than a single visit to a single page, a Google page? What if when we click the link the request goes to Google which then reads the page being linked to and redisplays it as its own. That is, is Google spoofing and somehow manipulating browser history etc to make it look otherwise? I'm sure this is all a bit fanciful. Perhaps someone could clarify? Thanks |
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#2 |
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I have noticed and wondered the same thing.
Here's a Safari extension that fixes the issue for links clicked on Google and Twitter: http://shauninman.com/archive/2012/01/19/detox
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#3 |
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what about Google News?
I've tried Detox, as well as gDirectlinks (another Safari plugin that does the same thing), but neither of them seems to do anything for links I click on news.google.com
I use Google News all the time, and for some reason my web browser history isn't showing the articles I actually read. It just shows a bunch of news.google.com links. Anybody have a solution? Thanks, -Joseph |
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