6/24/2023 0 Comments Google cookie viewer![]() How to access and view Chrome cache files or view Chrome cookies in Windows 10? This post offers detailed instruction. This cookie is used as part of the Bot Manager Standard and Bot Manager Premier workflow validation feature.Google Chrome saves numerous cached files and cookies on your computer. This cookie is related to our bot detection and prevention mechanism provided by our web application firewall provider. SameSite set by default: false ak_wfSession This cookie tracks the state of the challenge process. This cookie is used as part of the challenge action (Captcha, PoW, behavioral) available in the behavior anomaly detection method of Bot Manager Premier. Secure flag enabled by default: true (if HTTPS traffic) It is also used to control the behavior of the JavaScript on the client side, in particular the telemetry collection process and plays a role in the Proof of Work challenge process. It is used to track a user’s past behavior on a protected site. This cookie is used as part of the behavior anomaly detection method of Bot Manager Premier, it is also known as the long term cookie. It references the telemetry collected during the session. This cookie is used as part of the behavior anomaly detection method of Bot Manager Premier, it is also known as the short term cookie. This cookie is used as part of the session validation detection method and keeps track of the number of HTML pages and Ajax requests the client makes. This cookie is used to track the progress of the session through the browser validation detection method. ![]() When present, it is also used as the identifier instead of the IP address for bot rate control rules. This cookie is used to track the progress of the session going through the standard detection workflow. These cookies come from the Akamai’s Bot Manager solution being used inside the Qualtrics platform. ![]() The cookies in this section are used to help distinguish between real website traffic from bot traffic. It is only stored as long as the browser is open. This is a temporary cookie used for security while survey taking. Qualtrics is working to deprecate TLS1.0 in the future. This cookie is used for tracking clients connecting to Qualtrics using TLS1.0. Rather than defaulting to 6 months after the survey was started, the expiration of the QST cookie matches the setting for incomplete survey responses in survey options. A consequence of this is that the QST cookie that is dropped after submission has a different expiration date than for 2+ page surveys. Because there is only one page of the survey, the survey does not get a chance to drop a session cookie because the survey is submitted. The QST cookie behaves slightly differently for a one page survey. For 2+ page survey, the QST cookie expiration date will default to 6 months after the date the survey was started. However, if the survey is submitted, it will transform into the QST (Qualtrics Survey Tracker) cookie. If the survey remains incomplete, this cookie will stay here until it expires. This cookie allows Qualtrics to keep track of when an incomplete survey should be recorded as a response. So, for example, if my Incomplete survey responses setting is set to 1 week, the survey will drop a session cookie that expires one week from when I clicked the survey link. Whenever a survey is taken, a session cookie is dropped, with the expiration date matching with whatever is set for the incomplete survey responses setting in survey options. Behavior of QST and session cookies: 2+ Page Survey
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