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I agree with reference to the modification of internet history locations on the computer. However, those are actually hashes typically storing authentication information, in my experiences they are either 32-34 characters long. I believe what you meant to say when saying IE history can't be deleted was that certain aspects cannot due to the implicit nature of their largely unpublished existence causing them to be virtually unknown(Index.dat/ntuser.dat/etc....) however with a manual wave of the wand its possible to rid oneself of all internet history. We'd be underestimating roughly a 10 million dollar market of software that is all the same if we said that internet history cannot be deleted, and we wouldn't wanna do that!!! hahahahaha.
My concern is leaving a 'surfing trail' on computers that are not under my
control. IE allows one to delete user data in the form of cookies, history,
etc., but some of the same info remains in Vista 64 under:
C:/user/AppData/LocalLow/Microsoft/CryptnetUrlCache/Content and /MetaData
I believe that these files have something to do with "Certificates," but
exactly what is all this good information, when is it used, and what are the
implications of purging these files?
//technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/cc700805.aspx[/url]
"Jim Wood" wrote: