Source code to identify user through browser?

Mark Lawrence breamoreboy at yahoo.co.uk
Wed Jun 5 11:31:46 EDT 2013


On 05/06/2013 16:18, rusi wrote:
> On Jun 5, 8:10 pm, Carlos Nepomuceno <carlosnepomuc... at outlook.com>
> wrote:
>>> From: nos... at nospam.com
>>> Subject: Source code to identify user through browser?
>>> Date: Wed, 5 Jun 2013 15:08:54 +0200
>>> To: python-l... at python.org
>>
>>> Hello
>>
>>> I was wondering if some Python module were available to identify a
>>> user through their browser, like it's done on the Panopticlick site:
>>
>> What do you mean by user?
>
> Ha! Nice question.  Not in direct answer but here's E.W Dijkstra
> defining 'user':
>
> [from http://www.cs.utexas.edu/~EWD/transcriptions/EWD06xx/EWD618.html
> ]
> ----------------------------
> The computer “user” isn’t a real person of flesh and blood, with
> passions and brains. No, he is a mythical figure, and not a very
> pleasant one either. A kind of mongrel with money but without taste,
> an ugly caricature that is very uninspiring to work for. He is, as a
> matter of fact, such an uninspiring idiot that his stupidity alone is
> a sufficient explanation for the ugliness of most computer systems.
> And oh! Is he uneducated! That is perhaps his most depressing
> characteristic. He is equally education-resistant as another equally
> mythical bore, “the average programmer”, whose solid stupidity is the
> greatest barrier to progress in programming. It is a sad thought that
> large sections of computing science are effectively paralyzed by the
> narrow-mindedness and other grotesque limitations with which a poor
> literature has endowed these influential mythical figures. (Computing
> science is not unique in inventing such paralyzing caricatures:
> universities all over the world are threatened by the invention of
> “the average student”, scientific publishing is severely hampered by
> the invention of “the innocent reader” and even “the poor reader”!)
>

Where does the Bastard Operator From Hell fit in this? :)

-- 
"Steve is going for the pink ball - and for those of you who are 
watching in black and white, the pink is next to the green." Snooker 
commentator 'Whispering' Ted Lowe.

Mark Lawrence




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