JulianM_Paper-I 2 - 30 Apr 2008 - Main.JulianM
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META TOPICPARENT | name="WebPreferences" |
Phorm Over Function
[abstract goes here]
* DISCLAIMER * Please note, this is a work in progress, and not intended for review (just yet). I'm just experimenting with the editor, and using this to collect links/extracts which might be helpful. I'll remove this notice as soon as it is complete! | |
> > | Theme: Whether Industry Self Regulation, or Proposed Rules akin to the New York Bill are more appropriate | | Phorm, formerly 121Media, is a digital technology company which drew attention to itself when it announced it was is in talks with several major UK ISPs to use deep packet inspection to deliver a "Behavioral Targeting" advertising system which trackers surfers habits. It competes with apple and cat. | |
> > | * How do Phorm et. al Work?
- Cookies, search data, geodata
- Deep packet inspection
- Be careful to distinguish between 'anonymous' tracking, and tying to personal data
- Distinguish behavioural from contextual, demographic, geogrphic,
- Diferrence between site-based, and network based behavioural tracking
* Proposed Solutions
- Industry self regulation
- Opt-in / Opt-out, and transparency
- Differences in approache between Phorm and its competitiors
- New York Bill * Supported by microsoft, probably as a dig against Google (but potential acquistion of yahoo?)
- FTC Proposed Guidelines
* The case for allowing it:
- More revenue in exchange for free online content
- BUT, 10% of Americans and 1/3 of Europe
- Adblock (and unblocking it)
- Contextual v Behavioural advertising systems
- Benefits from recommendation systems like Amazon and NetFlix?
- Consumer outrage curtails the worst abuses, e.g. Facebook Beacon
- Classic should the law follow or lead technology problem
* The (stronger) case against
- Lack of awareness
- Future abuse (government collection - the 'search for cures and your premiums rise) argument
- Unique role of ISP's as gatekeepers (tie with arguments about bandwidth throttling?)
- Privacy statements change overnight; bust companies whose sole assets are customer data
- aggregation compounds these problems, no way to notify consumer ex post
- This data can't be that much more useful for just targeted ads, can it? Temptation to expand uses
- Self regulation doesn't reach wide enough - NAI covers less than 25% of advertisers
- See criticism from Cambridge Researcher
- Distinguishing between 'anonymous', personal, and sensitive data
- We're going to waive all manner of rights away in EULA legalese
| | FN 1 - The Register, The Phorm Files: All yer data pimping news in one place
FN 2 - Phorm: Official Site | | FN 5 - Cornell Law School, Right To Personal Information | |
< < | FN - 6 New York Times, Louise Story, How Do They Track You? Let Us Count the Ways, (Mar. 9, 2008) | > > | FN 6 - New York Times, Louise Story, How Do They Track You? Let Us Count the Ways, (Mar. 9, 2008)
FN 7 - The Guardiam, Neil McIntosh, Letting it all hang out, (Mar. 18 2008)
FN 8 - Third Party Internet Advertising Consumer's Bill of Rights Act of 2008
FN 9 - Blog, James Edwards, Unblocking Adblock (Feb. 5, 2008)
FN 10 - Blog, Tim Tobin (Partner at Proskauer Rose), Privacy Law Blog, Consumer Advocates Target Online Behavioral Advertising: Broad Regulation Threatens to Impede Delivery of Relevant Advertising and Business Models for Free Online Content (Mar. 27, 2008)
FN 11 - Text of the Dec 2007 FTC Statement
FN 12 - Law.com, David Bender (Senior Privacy Counsel and DLA Piper), Do Behavioral Ads Endanger Your Privacy?, (Apr. 2, 2008) | | | |
> > | FN 13 - Conn. HB05765 (2008), which is somewhat narrower than the New York bill. | | -- JulianM - 30 Apr 2008 |
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JulianM_Paper-I 1 - 30 Apr 2008 - Main.JulianM
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> > |
META TOPICPARENT | name="WebPreferences" |
Phorm Over Function
[abstract goes here]
* DISCLAIMER * Please note, this is a work in progress, and not intended for review (just yet). I'm just experimenting with the editor, and using this to collect links/extracts which might be helpful. I'll remove this notice as soon as it is complete!
Phorm, formerly 121Media, is a digital technology company which drew attention to itself when it announced it was is in talks with several major UK ISPs to use deep packet inspection to deliver a "Behavioral Targeting" advertising system which trackers surfers habits. It competes with apple and cat.
FN 1 - The Register, The Phorm Files: All yer data pimping news in one place
FN 2 - Phorm: Official Site
FN 3 - Wikipedia, Diagram illustrating how Phorm Works
FN 4 - New York Times, Louise Story, A Push to Limit the Tracking of Web Surfers’ Clicks, (Mar. 20, 2008)
FN 5 - Cornell Law School, Right To Personal Information
FN - 6 New York Times, Louise Story, How Do They Track You? Let Us Count the Ways, (Mar. 9, 2008)
-- JulianM - 30 Apr 2008
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Revision 2 | r2 - 30 Apr 2008 - 16:24:50 - JulianM |
Revision 1 | r1 - 30 Apr 2008 - 04:45:12 - JulianM |
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