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What is the best way to ensure that a query string does not get included as part of HTTP Referrer data?

I have noticed that some potentially sensitive information (e.g. UTM fields, which do not really require SSL) may otherwise leak.

The objective is for an originating URL such as:

http://mywebsite.com/mypage/?myvar=xxx

To be passed as referrer only as:

http://mywebsite.com/mypage/

I have read about the referrer policy meta directive ( <meta name="referrer" content="origin">), but it doesn't seem to be widely implemented.

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  • I take it you are not in full control over which clients are accessing your site? May 20, 2016 at 11:11
  • Yes. I know that at the end the browser has full authority on this, but I am looking for a well supported solution (if any exists). May 20, 2016 at 11:24

1 Answer 1

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I would say you should use the noreferrer directive, either in separate links (<a rel="noreferrer">) or as you say set a referrer policy.

But there are other solutions, i.e., hacks: like this one:

Another referrer hiding method is to convert the original link URL to a Data URI scheme-based URL containing small HTML page with a meta refresh to the original URL. When the user is redirected from the data: page, the original referrer is hidden. The first public implementation of this method is the Darefer app for ownCloud

That is a quote from: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HTTP_referer#Referer_hiding

PS. This is all for completely hide the referrer header and not only removing the query string.

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