That's exactly my point. Everyone just Googles and puts random stuff in there until it works.
One day someone will get sued over it, because that policy is telling the browser what you say you will do with that data.
Imagine if financial reporting software worked like this: "Oh, we just tried outputting different values in the balance sheets until our stock went up".
> Imagine if financial reporting software worked like this: "Oh, we just tried outputting different values in the balance sheets until our stock went up".
You're making me wonder if they don't do some kind of A/B testing already....
Have you been reading the news the past 15 years? That's precisely what derivatives are used for. Derivatives, and bought-and-paid-for auditors who also provide "consulting services."
One day someone will get sued over it, because that policy is telling the browser what you say you will do with that data.
Imagine if financial reporting software worked like this: "Oh, we just tried outputting different values in the balance sheets until our stock went up".