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#10
I can only assume it may have blocked them.
Okay. Although, Person 2 does not have AdGuard extension n' Block cookies are not added to Firefox.
I'll post back any progress.
Thanks again.
Cheers
Okay, I'm taking "That would be fine" to mean it's okay to post link. Hope link works.
Google Groups
I generally allow 1st party cookies and block 3rd party cookies. What exactly does an exception Allow > Add really allow?
I wanted to use https: // teams.microsoft.com, but it tested my 3rd party cookie settings and did not allow me to proceed ("D'oh! To open the web app, you need to change your browser settings to allow third-party cookies."). Allowing [*.]teams.microsoft.com however did not make any difference.
It’s the other domain that is being called from the visited site, here teams.microsoft.com, that needed to be granted the exception, in this case login.microsoftonline.com. How to find out what needs to receive the exception? That’s hard. I retried the link several times and watched the bottom left corner of the browser window where Chrome shows the sites that are being visited indirectly. Short flashes only, if the network speed is OK.
Is there a way to find this out more easily, i.e. calmly traceably? For instance, can the info be found under Inspect (Ctrl+Shift+i)?
Hello pps,
I suppose you could allow all cookies in Google Chrome, clear your cookies, go the site, and check your cookies history afterwards using Option One below to see what cookies were added.
Delete Cookies in Google Chrome in Windows | Windows 10 Tutorials