Eva Ķibermane studied at Uzvara Secondary School, graduated from Bauska Music School, and received her secondary education at Riga Commercial School.
She has obtained a lawyer’s qualification and a master’s degree in the professional program “Legal Sciences” at the Faculty of Law of the University of Latvia.
Taking into account her love for mathematics and numbers, in addition to law studies, she also obtained a bachelor’s degree in social sciences and a master’s degree in economics at the Riga Technical University. The acquired knowledge has developed analytical work skills, information structuring skills and the ability to critically evaluate and solve legal issues, identifying and understanding their interconnections with the basic principles of business, accounting and finance.
During her studies, two summers were spent in the United States as part of the “Work and Travel USA” student program.
Eva has been working as a lawyer since 2004. Initially, Eva worked as a lawyer in several commercial companies and in the law office ZAB “Law Office of Sworn Attorney Jānis Moors”, later SIA ZAB NOVIUS Moors. Since 2014, she practiced as a sworn attorney’s assistant, while in 2020 she was herself admitted as a sworn attorney.
In addition, since 2015, Eva has also been using her knowledge and practice while working as an insolvency administrator.
Eva regularly attends courses and seminars on various legal topics, including completion of the professional qualification development program and obtaining a certificate in the field of children’s rights protection.
Free time is mostly spent with family, actively relaxing, hiking, skiing, traveling and participating in adventure competitions and other active pursuits.
Sīkdatne jeb sīkfails (angļu: cookie — burt. 'cepums'), ir tīmekļa servera nosūtīta neliela teksta virkne klientam (parasti tīmekļa pārlūkprogrammai), kura tiek saglabāta lietotāja datorā kā parasta datne. Ar tās palīdzību serveris var identificēt lietotāju, pārbaudot klienta atsūtīto sīkdatni. Šis mehānisms tika ieviests tādēļ, ka pats HTTP protokols neuztur savienojuma stāvokli, un klienta katru jaunu pieprasījumu serveris uzskata par jaunu klientu.
Sīkdatņu mehānismu apraksta RFC 2965 (HTTP State Management Mechanism), kas iznāca 2000. gadā un nomainīja RFC 2109.
Visbiežāk sīkdatnes izmanto lietotāju autentifikācijai (lietotājam ievadot savu lietotājvārdu un paroli, serveris nosūta uz lietotāja datora unikālu teksta virkni, pēc kā vēlāk var noteikt, ka lietotājs ir pieslēdzies sistēmai), sesijas uzturēšanai, kā arī specifiskas informācijas saglabāšanai par lietotāju. Izmantojot sīkdatnes, lietotājs veido tīmekļa vietni atbilstoši savām vēlmēm un interesēm.
Kopš sīkdatņu ieviešanas daudzi interneta lietotāji ir noraizējušies par personiskās dzīves izsekošanu, jo ar sīkdatnēm var izsekot lietotāja veiktās darbības un ieradumus, kad tas veic tīmekļa lapu pārlūkošanu. Sakarā ar to vairākās valstīs (ASV, Eiropas Savienībā) ir pieņemti likumi, kas regulē sīkdatņu lietošanu. Bez tam sīkdatņu negatīvs aspekts ir slikta drošība, jo tās ne vienmēr var precīzi identificēt lietotāju (ja datoru izmanto vairāki lietotāji), tās var ļaunprātīgi pārtvert un izmainīt.
Sīkdatnes ir iespējams arī nobloķēt, bet, tiklīdz tas ir izdarīts, var rasties problēmas, jo var nestrādāt kāda no tīmekļa vietnes piedāvātajām funkcijām vai pat liegta piekļuve pie tās. Dažādām pārlūkprogrammām ir atšķirīgi veidi, kā nobloķēt sīkdatnes. Sīkdatnes, kā jebkuru failu, ir iespējams arī izdzēst, bet tas nozīmē, ka uz sīkdatņu pamata veiktie iestatījumi netiks saglabāti.
An HTTP cookie (also called web cookie, Internet cookie, browser cookie, or simply cookie) is a small piece of data sent from a website and stored on the user's computer by the user's web browser while the user is browsing. Cookies were designed to be a reliable mechanism for websites to remember stateful information (such as items added in the shopping cart in an online store) or to record the user's browsing activity (including clicking particular buttons, logging in, or recording which pages were visited in the past). They can also be used to remember arbitrary pieces of information that the user previously entered into form fields such as names, addresses, passwords, and credit card numbers.