Posted by: Stephen Baker on March 04
I was at an advertising conference last week. Some folks are concerned that privacy advocates will press the government to regulate the most common of tracking technologies: behavioral targeting. That’s the system that drops a cookie onto our computers to record many of our wanderings through the Web in hopes of targeting us with relevant ads.
I had just written The Next Net, about how we’ll be tracked on the mobile Internet. And I was thinking that if behavior targeting worries people, the data cascading from our phone use will terrify them.
But there are also plenty of reasons to worry about regulation. First, there’s a divide in our society between people extremely worried about erosion of privacy and others who appear, with their Web postings, videos and Tweets, to celebrate it. Which group wins? They both can.
Take a look at this new friend-finding location-based application for Facebook, Locaccino. It comes out of Carnegie Mellon. The idea is that people can fine-tune their privacy profiles, deciding who can see where exactly they are, and who gets a blurrier vision, or none at all.
The point is that millions of people are clearly eager to exchange all sorts of data. It’s a way for them to learn, make friends, find things, and have fun. What’s more, it supports a vibrant and innovative software market in a gloom-infested tech industry. Some of the innovation will go toward protecting privacy. Because privacy is something that both sides of this debate want and need, even if they don’t agree on what it is.
Regulations? The most important privacy regs, in my view, should mandate clear communications on how customer data will be used, and will limit tracking to those who have chosen to participate.
Mr. Baker:
Last month, as part of work calling for federal safeguards on behavioral targeting, the Center for Digital Democracy and the US Public Interest Research Group jointly filed a FTC complaint on mobile marketing. The behavioral targeting paradigm is already at the core of the mobile advertising business model. This is invisible to consumers and most regulators. See: http://www.democraticmedia.org/node/397
Here's a site that talks about the lastest in digital security and privacy on mobile devices: http://www.justaskgemalto.com/en/communicating
In Blogspotting Senior Writer Stephen Baker and Associate Editor Heather Green take a look at how cutting-edge technologies are changing business and society. Whether its blogs or wikis, data crunching or data targeting, technology’s advances are reshaping the world that we live in.