How to view cookies on my computer windows 7




















William Hilsum William Hilsum k 19 19 gold badges silver badges bronze badges. Thank you, that is not at all intuitive! Odd that a search of the AppData folder doesn't return any results for "cookie". Much obliged! Matthew Lock Matthew Lock 4, 2 2 gold badges 33 33 silver badges 42 42 bronze badges. The Overflow Blog. Stack Gives Back Safety in numbers: crowdsourcing data on nefarious IP addresses.

Featured on Meta. New post summary designs on greatest hits now, everywhere else eventually. Related 1. Hot Network Questions. Question feed. Super User works best with JavaScript enabled. Easy to follow. No jargon. Pictures helped.

Didn't match my screen. Incorrect instructions. Too technical. Not enough information. Not enough pictures. Any additional feedback?

Submit feedback. Thank you for your feedback! Click remove individual cookies. It's a link in the middle of the page. Doing so will bring up a list of your Firefox browser's cookies. If you're using custom settings for your Firefox history, you won't have the remove individual cookies option; instead, click the Show Cookies button on the right side of the page.

Firefox cookies are organized by site. Double-clicking a site's folder will display its cookies, and clicking a cookie will display its specific attributes. Method 3. Open Microsoft Edge. This app is dark-blue with a white "e" on it. Navigate to a site whose cookies you wish to view. Since Edge doesn't store your cookies in a specific Settings folder, you'll need to visit the site to which the cookies relate. Click …. It's in the upper-right side of the Edge window.

Click F12 Developer Tools. This option is near the middle of the drop-down menu. Clicking this option prompts a pop-up window to appear at the bottom of the Microsoft Edge window. You can also press the F12 key to open this window. Click the Debugger tab. It's at the top of the pop-up window that's at the bottom of the Edge window. Double-click Cookies. It's on the far-left side of the pop-up window. Review the site's cookies.

You'll see a list of cookies below the Cookies option. Clicking one will display the cookie's attributes. Method 4. Open Internet Explorer. It's a light-blue "e" icon with a yellow stripe. It's in the top-right corner of the Internet Explorer window.

Click Internet Options. This option is near the bottom of the screen. It's in the lower-right side of the "Browsing history" section.

If you don't see Settings , first click the General tab at the top of the Internet Options window. Click View files. You'll see this option near the bottom of the Settings pop-up window.

Review Internet Explorer's cookies. The files in this folder are all temporary files from browsing, but any file with "cookie:[your username]" in its name is a cookie. Unlike most browsers, you cannot view an Internet Explorer cookie's specific attributes. Method 5. Click Safari. It's a menu item in the top-left side of the screen.

Click Preferences. This option is near the top of the drop-down menu. Click the Privacy tab. It's in the middle of the top row of options on the Preferences window. Click Manage Website Data. This option is near the middle of the window. All files listed here are temporary website files, though any file with the word "Cookies" below its name is a cookie. Only keep cookies of your favorite sites with which you have an account so you won't have to enter your account name and password to log in every time you visit.

Other cookies are not necessary and some of them are used to track you across the web, which is an invasion of your privacy.

Not Helpful 3 Helpful Bing is not a web browser, like Internet Explorer or Firefox.



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