I buy a ton of the computers and IT products for my company through newegg.com. They have always had great prices and rock solid policies.
I tried to make a purchase from them this morning, and much to my
astonishment, I couldn’t log into my account. I was sent into an
infinite loop between their image verification and log-in scripts. After
some investigating, I concluded they are now requiring Firefox users to have network.http.sendRefererHeader set to 1.
Many Firefox users, myself and every computer in my company included,
set this value to zero, which prevents websites from seeing where you
came from. To me this is simply a privacy concern, as it’s nobody else’s
business but my own to know the last website I visited. Some
anti-spyware software automatically set this value as well, so you may
not even know if your is set to zero.
7. If you are using Firefox, type “about:config” in the address bar. Set the “network.http.sendRefererHeader” value to 1.
By requiring the value, newegg is completely preventing a huge number
of Firefox users from using their site, and subsequently becoming
customers. Not only is this unneeded and is most likely due to some
corporate idiot that thinks they can add to the bottom line by tracking
users better, but this is an unacceptable coding practice. They have
currently lost me as a customer (I can honestly say that it is a sizable loss).
If you own an ecommerce site, don’t ever make changes and requirements that force your customers to lower their privacy standards or lower their browser security. I promise that you will lose customers as a result of making changes like this. This is completely fixable, but at the expense of your own privacy. I’m surprised that newegg would do this given that a huge number of their customers, if not the majority, are tech savvy shoppers who are likely to also block referrers.
If you own an ecommerce site, don’t ever make changes and requirements that force your customers to lower their privacy standards or lower their browser security. I promise that you will lose customers as a result of making changes like this. This is completely fixable, but at the expense of your own privacy. I’m surprised that newegg would do this given that a huge number of their customers, if not the majority, are tech savvy shoppers who are likely to also block referrers.