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In some cases, recipient programs are able to meaningfully compare two cookies for equality. A magic cookie is analogous to, for example, the token supplied at a coat check (cloakroom) counter in Real Life . The token has no intrinsic meaning, but its uniqueness allows it to be exchanged for the correct coat when returned to the coat check counter. The coat check token is opaque because the way in which the counter staff are able to find the correct coat when the token is presented is immaterial to the person who wishes their coat returned. Cookies are used as identifying tokens in many computer applications. When one visits a Website , the remote server may leave an HTTP Cookie on one's computer, where they are often used to Authenticate identity upon returning to the website. Cookies are a component of the most common authentication method used by the X Window System . Some cookies (such as HTTP Cookie s) have a Digital Signature appended to them or are otherwise Encrypted , so that hostile users or applications are unable to ''forge'' a cookie and present it to the sending application, in order to gain access that the hostile user is otherwise not entitled to. Depending on the nature of the encryption algorithm used, users may be able to verify that a cookie is authentic. ORIGIN One possible source of the term, which cannot be proven definitely today, was the comic strip Odd Bodkins by Dan O'Neill published in the San Francisco Chronicle during most of the 1960s . Several of O'Neill's characters ate Magic Cookies from the Magic Cookie Bush, many thought this was a euphemism for LSD , unmentionable in a major newspaper. In any case, the Magic Cookie transported the eater into Magic Cookie Land; thus, perhaps, a small token produced a whole context or experience. VIDEO TERMINALS Some early Video Terminal Units did not have the memory capacity to store video attributes (such as intensity or inverse display) for each on-screen character individually. Instead, a "magic cookie" character was inserted that displayed as a blank but instructed the video logic to change the attribute of subsequent text. As a consequence, each shift of display attributes would invariably insert one or more space characters, which had to be taken into consideration when designing a particular screen layout. Videotex , as used in Teletext , is one of the few instances which have survived into the modern era. SEE ALSO REFERENCES |
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