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Hm... One thing that I can do easily is give you a tiny(1pxX1px) image code, and anyone who views that image has their IP recorded. You post it anywhere, and anyone who views it gets logged. I would much prefer to have it log people's userIDs instead, but I.... HM, that might work! (a bit later) Ok, I have done it.
Tracking-database-name is an arbitrary name of the file you want, this is where it saves any logs(all files will be in the /track folder as 'track_*name*.txt'). To prevent confusion, please use a different name for each place you use this. Also, please do not use any special characters, especially not '/'. - and _ are OK. Note that this is optional, and if you do not add this, it will save your logs to a file named "unknown". IMG is also optional, and is the second argument. If you have no second argument(no slash after the database name), or '.png' as the second argument, it will display a 1pxX1px black image. If you have anything else, it will attempt to load and display http://www.wildernessguardians.com/*img*. If if can't, it will default to the 1pxX1px black image. example usage:
will display: ![]() ( http://www.wildernessguardians.com/pip.png ) and save your logs to: http://www.wildernessguardians.com/track/track_lordyPM.txt ![]() *THIS* is is a prime example of tracking-cookies and how they can be used. THIS is why lots of money go into trace-removing software... and the best part is, nothing can stop it! Why? Because you *need* this cookie to stay logged in! ![]() ![]() -RobbieThe1st |
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