It's interesting that I had to enable cookies just to reply to this question. As SabrePilot said, you can't manage cookies for individual sites. What a drag. Cookies are well known for tracking data and usage, so I have always turned them off.
Unfortunately, cookies are need for passwords, info, and individual settings for banks, certain websites, and email accounts.
How in the world is Edge useful if this can't be regulated? Based on this, I've gone over to FireFox, which I also have mixed feelings about. Trying out safari. I already use it on iPad. Hate Google Chrome since it captures a lot of things you do and acts many times like a virus program in determining your use of it.
Oh well. The old internet explorer is still available in Windows 10. I'm even evaluating going back to windows 8.1, which I didn't like either. Perhaps Windows 7 is the way to go.
Testing SMB Security with Nmap NSE Scripts. Bundled with Nmap are addon scripts that perform all manner of functionality. Of note to those in a Windows environment are the 34 smb-scripts that are available. These allow enumeration of entities on Windows systems remotely using the Microsoft SMB protocol (port 445). Import/Export Cookies To import cookies, simply click on the button “ Import cookies ”, paste the cookies to add in JSON format and click on the button “ Submit cookie changes ”. For a references of the accepted JSON format simply export some cookies and inspect the copied text.
For someone that wants us to upgrade, Microsoft is making it difficult. Even Windows Media Player is gone, gone, gone, whoa, whoa, whoa...