Browser Detection of Website Statistics Services 25
An anonymous reader submits "David Naylor has reviewed the browser recognition capabilities of seven free website statistics services. Among other things, he kills the myth that many Opera users go unaccounted for in website statistics because of the default UA spoofing. Furthermore, he shows that the quality of browser recognition ranges from absolutely abysmal to near perfect."
What would be more interesting: (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:What would be more interesting: (Score:2)
Nice work - some minor suggestions for 'ya (Score:3, Interesting)
As you know, one can easily spoof the User Agent (and Firefox makes this totally trivial) - any idea on what percentage of folks are doing this type of stuff? Too bad that Slashdot didn't put this on the front page, because then you could analyze that inbound traffic.
P.S. FYI FWIW: using Analog, here's my browser percentages [komar.org] for Christmas/2004. I also have a Browser Info Page [komar.org] for those folks interested in seeing real-time what their browser is reporting.
Re:Nice work - some minor suggestions for 'ya (Score:2)
Re:Nice work - some minor suggestions for 'ya (Score:1)
Re:Nice work - some minor suggestions for 'ya (Score:1)
It's broken :-) . I'm in England, United Kingdom, not United States!
Nice site name (Score:4, Funny)
MSN Explorer (Score:2)
It would be helpful for determing how many people out there actually want a candy-interface all-in-one browsing/email/chat experience.
Re:MSN Explorer (Score:1)
Re:MSN Explorer (Score:2)
Thanks for the post (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Thanks for the post (Score:2, Informative)
Adblock extension interference? (Score:1, Interesting)
drops Mozilla stats for services
that use web bug like things to
track. Anyone have an idea of just
how much this warps reported stats?
Cannot be accurate (Score:2, Interesting)
he kills the myth that many Opera users go unaccounted for in website statistics because of the default UA spoofing
It's just not possible to build accurate statistics from observing HTTP traffic, and I wish people would stop trying. HTTP logs are good for one thing: performance tuning your server.
Don't believe me? Here's a simple test. Fire up a traffic logger, Internet Explorer, and Opera. Go to a typical dynamic website in Internet Explorer, click on a link, and hit the back button. Now do the
Re:Cannot be accurate (Score:1)
Re:Cannot be accurate (Score:1)
Re:Cannot be accurate (Score:1)
Measuring connections can have drawbacks, too. Did the user close and open their browser, or did a different user from inside the same proxy make a connection? Even so, it
Spoof the spoofers (Score:1)
I just wish that all the browsers would send what they really are, and that websites wouldn't deliberately ki
Re:Spoof the spoofers (Score:1)
AWstats (Score:1)