American U. Prof. Kathryn

From Marketplace, Nov. 1, 2007:

“Teens are growing up in an immersive digital environment. On any given day, they’re glued to their cell phones, sharing videos on YouTube, and hanging out on MySpace or Facebook. These new online social networks are becoming critical tools for adolescent development – encouraging kids to explore their identities, find their voices, reach out to peers and even engage in politics.

But as social networks begin to “monetize” their businesses, the forces of interactive marketing are rapidly transforming them into sophisticated data collection and ad targeting machines. Advertisers are practically salivating over the abundant psychographic and behavioral information that social networking sites can offer. In addition to basic demographics, marketers can glean a wealth of “enormously rich” data. Including personal relationships, ethnicity, religion, political leanings, sexual orientation, or whether a person drinks or smokes. Dozens of new data miners and ad-serving companies have swooped in to “nano-target” and “hypo-target” individual users with personalized ads.

Social networks are just one part of what advertisers see as an expanding “digital marketing ecosystem.” Today’s teens are also being targeted on their cell phones, through instant messaging and in videogames. Marketers are making it fun and easy for kids to create online commercials for brands, which are then distributed widely on the Internet. Companies are crafting one-to-one messages, designed to work at a subconscious level by tapping into an individual’s innermost needs, desires and anxieties.

Most teens don’t realize the extent to which they’ve become part of elaborate, virtual focus groups. The Internet is still relatively young. It would be a shame if we allowed the promise of the new digital media to be undermined by the unfettered growth of invasive marketing. Such trends could turn the online world into a surveillance society.

The loss of privacy is too high a price for reaping the benefits of the Digital Age.”

Jeff

[I spoke yesterday at the beginning of a two-day hearing at the FTC. There wasn’t time to say my complete prepared remarks. Here it is]:

Exactly one year ago—November 1, 2006—the Center for Digital Democracy and the USPIRG filed a 50-page complaint asking the commission to “undertake an immediate, formal investigation of online advertising practices.” When we met with Chairman Majoras soon after, it was evident from her interest that she recognized we had identified a series of major consumer privacy concerns. Commissioners Leibowitz and Harbour expressed concern as well. Over the last year, I have come to admire the hard work and dedication of the FTC privacy staff.

But we believe the time for fact-finding is over. The commission is the designated federal agency that is supposed to safeguard consumer privacy. It must now act to protect Americans from the unfair and deceptive practices that have evolved as part of what the industry calls the “interactive marketing ecosystem.” As we stated last year, “The data collection and interactive marketing system that is shaping the entire U.S. electronic marketplace is being built to aggressively track us wherever we go, creating data profiles to be used in ever-more sophisticated and personalized “one-to-one” targeting schemes.” This is true today across all platforms: PCs, cell phones, social networks, broadband videos, even eventually TV.

Few members of the public understand this (as the new Annenberg/Samuelson poll analysis shows). They don’t know that when they—and their children—go online, marketers are digitally shadowing there ever move. Interactive marketers—and the technologies being deployed (from behavioral targeting and retargeting, immersive rich media and with new forms of social network profiling)—are helping create a commercial surveillance society. Our every move, interests, even mouse clicks—tracked, tabulated, stored and then used or sold to the highest advertiser bidder.

Yes, online marketers. You can track, collect and use for commercial purposes when someone searches for a health concern—such as their child’s use of Ritalin. But just because you can do it doesn’t mean its right.

Yes, digital advertisers can behaviorally target consumers looking for a sub prime mortgage and sign them up. But just because you can do it doesn’t mean its right.

And, online marketers can eavesdrop on the members of social networks, including the harvesting of their personal profiles for commercial purposes. But just because you can do it doesn’t mean its right.

The online marketing industry is trying to hide behind a number of things, inc. the facetious claim that much of what they collect isn’t personally identifiable. They claim they respect the privacy of children and teenagers. We are given assurances that all these services are to make our online experiences more personalized and convenient. But personalization doesn’t require the creation of a wholesale data collection system. Yes, online advertising plays a critical role for the “monetization” of content, esp. the news, information and culture a civil society requires. But the industries—and its trade groups—have so far failed to provide the necessary leadership to address privacy concerns.

That is why today, CDD and USPIRG are filing an amended complaint. We provide abundant details about new and emerging privacy threats since November 2006. We show how children and teens are the focus of behavioral targeting; how online mortgage loan and lead generation companies have contributed to the recent national tragedy where too many Americans lost their homes; we provide a disturbing window on the target marketing and data collection practices used by social networks, inc. MySpace and Facebook. It discusses new forms of racial and ethnic profiling. We also remind the commission that we urged it one year ago to investigate the already disturbing growing consolidation in the online advertising and marketing industry. A warning that was before the new wave of takeovers including : Microsoft/aQuantive and AdECN; Yahoo!/Blue Lithium and Right Media; TW/AOL and Tacoda, Third Screen Media and AdTech AG; WPP and 24/7; and, of course, Google/Doubleclick.

We want to underscore that the privacy threats arising from the Google/Dclick merger are the gravest—and we urge the commission to act on the EPIC petition.

Just because online advertising is helping paying for the content doesn’t give the industry carte blanche to unleash a wide spectrum of abusive practices. No one is saying you can’t engage in marketing in this new era. But we need rules—not a lawless “wild west.” Some in the industry are offering an implicit fear tactic: suggesting that if you are messing around with advertising you will kill the golden goose of the digital economy and online content. That’s absurd and untrue. What we are saying is we need governmental rules and action from the leading companies to protect consumer privacy. The trade groups have failed to provide any real leadership—which is why self-regulation has failed—and cannot truly work. In addition new online privacy channels run by interactive marketers such as Google should not be propaganda tools—they must foster a broad public debate about the role—and harms—of the online medium.

It’s time for the FTC to protect consumers by fully implementing and enforcing Fair Information Practices, as proposed by the OECD. Unless the commission does this, our privacy—and that of our children—will be increasingly at risk. The time for fact-finding is over. Our data collection and behavioral targeting models are being exported abroad, posing risks to EU consumers (as we explained recently to the Article 29 Working Group). As incidents such as the public exposure of personal information collected by AOL of our searches revealed, the vast gathering of information by marketers also raise concerns about identity theft and fraud.

The question is: will the FTC act to protect the US public and help ensure that the Internet and other online media is a safe environment for communications and commerce.

We wait its answer.

Thank You

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BBC Signs up with Doubleclick: Privacy out the window, along with Beeb staff?

It’s interesting to watch the tandem work of Google and Doubleclick, even prior to the proposed merger. Doubleclick was just signed-up by the BBC to handle its forthcoming interactive display paid advertising on BBC.com (the Beeb better explain to all its users what will happen with those digital crumpets placed on their computers–I mean cookies, pixels, and other digital spy techniques). Here’s how NMA magazine [sub required] reports it: “BBC Worldwide has appointed DoubleClick to handle display ads on BBC.com, following last week’s green light to allow advertising on the international site... It will also be responsible for the pre-roll advertising on BBC.com through its existing BBC World deal. DoubleClick will work with BBC Worldwide’s internal sales team…The ads will only be served to users outside of the UK…” (Doubleclick already works with the BBC, handling ads for BBC World and the Beeb’s magazine).

Last March, the BBC signed a deal with Google’s YouTube, calling it a “ground-breaking partnership.” Meanwhile, the BBC is drastically cutting staff and reducing news budgets, as it faces reduced public funding. The reduction in funds for the world’s premier public service programmer–and the staff cuts–is a story unto itself–which we will eventually address. But the BBC should not be permitted to endorse a business model for online marketing where its users–even if not UK citizens and residents—are tagged, tracked, targeted, and sold to the highest behavioral targeting bidder. Unless safeguards are imposed, online advertising could have an adverse impact on the diversity and integrity of the news. This deal should also behoove the BBC news staff to launch a major investigation into the Google and Doubleclick merger, inc. how such a merger will impact public affairs programming.

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Google Becomes a member of the Nielsen "family." Threats to our Privacy as we watch TV

Few readers may recall when Norman Lear’s “Mary Hartman” realized that she and her fellow patients at a psychiatric facility watched a Nielsen ratings-connected TV set. Lear’s critique that the TV rating system that has determined success for the TV business is deeply flawed and–frankly, crazy– is still true. But Google (and Doubleclick’s) move to monitor and analyze our viewing on TV and other platforms is just as insane–if we want to protect our privacy. “Google has been reporting millions of second-by-second data points to its TV Ads clients,” explains MediaDaily News. “Ultimately, Google expects TV’s interactive capabilities to improve to the point that it is generating the same kind of immediacy and backchannel as the Internet.” [from an interview with Mike Steib, director of Google TV Ads].

We doubt cable and DBS subscribers recognize that they are now involuntary members of the Nielsen/Google data tracking combine. Here’s how Multichannel News reports on the deal: “By combining Nielsen demographic data with aggregated set-top box data, Google plans to provide advertisers and agencies with comprehensive information…We have millions of set-top boxes that belong to EchoStar from which EchoStar is pulling data and is providing it to us for the Google TV Ad system: It’s a lot of data points,” Steib said…Advertisers can better understand exactly how their ad is performing and make near real-time changes to their TV advertising campaigns to deliver better ads to viewers, according to Google.

“One of the things we haven’t been able to provide to our advertisers to date, when we report back the very next day the impressions that they’ve received from the set-top boxes, we have not yet reported demographics and audience composition,” he said. “We are now going to be able to make that information available to our advertisers”…Google and Nielsen claim that as a result of their new partnership, this is the first time that advertisers and agencies will have such a level of detailed measurement available in a single place and at such a large scale.”

We hope Congress and the FTC will step in to prevent the entire TV viewing population from becoming involuntary drafted into the Nielsen/Google data collection, profiling, and targeting system.

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GoogleClick: "access to the bulk of the

Via SearchEngineWatch: Excerpt: “Is Google moving towards being a total online advertising resource? Absolutely, they have search, analytics, content publishing resources both with AdSense and the newly added YouTube, and now an ad serving platform with video and rich media expertise – but also tracking abilities for the source of the pageviews, and more importantly the ability to monitor behavior across all sources of traffic.

Add DoubleClick and Google now has access to the bulk of the world’s online behavior. Not only search behavior, but anywhere they are controlling the ads. Impression and click counts are not the only thing they gain buying DoubleClick.

They tried to get the world to give them access to online behavior when they bought Urchin and started giving away online analytics. Fortunately the majority of online companies decided to keep paying independent third parties – though Google would have had no problem forcing out all the web analytics companies that needed to have their customers pay for their programs.

The buy of DoubleClick is another end run – sure Google is claiming they will not use this information – bit hard not to collect it – but with each step Google is fast becoming Big Brother.”

“Google, DoubleClick: Myths and Facts.” Frank Watson. October 22, 2007

Google Branded Advertising Future, via

Take a quick look at Tangozebra, especially its ad gallery. It will help you better understand where Google is headed (as if its 3Q analyst call didn’t say volumes!). DoubleClick acquired Tangozebra last March.

Google & Verizon Meet on 700 MHz: Detente Coming?

Just an excerpt from Monday’s Communications Daily.

[Verizon lobbyist and former Congressman Tom] “Tauke…confirmed he had visited Google’s Mountain View, Calif., headquarters. Google invited him, he said… “I’m not the business guy, so I’m not going to say that I came away with any sense from the meeting as to where the future is on the 700 MHz auction or other things,” said Tauke, Verizon’s executive vice president for public affairs, policy and communications. “But clearly, when you look at what they do and what we do, there are some great opportunities, as there are with many other companies.” Google wants to get its applications and services such as Google Maps onto mobile phones, and Verizon wants its customers to have access to those services too, Tauke said. “It’s a matter of getting the right devices, having the right protections for the customer and being able to figure out how to use the technology and the new opportunities that are out there in a way that will serve both companies well as well as serve our customers,” he said.”

from: Tauke Hints of Talks With Google Over 700 MHz. Communications Daily. Oct. 22, 2007.

Privacy, Antitrust, and the GoogleClick Deal: Addressing the Consumer Harms

As the debate grows over Google’s growing threats to consumer privacy, we want to point to an important paper given to FTC today. It’s by Peter Swire, who is a professor and senior Fellow at the Center for American Progress. The full document can be accessed here. Here’s a key excerpt from “Protecting Consumers: Privacy Matters in Antitrust Analysis.” Peter Swire. Center for American Progress. 10/19/2007.

“The proposed merger may illustrate one such effect on quality. Currently, an individual using search at Google and clicking on the occasional ad has one or more cookies set by Google. (Individuals may also use one or more fully-identified products of Google’s, such as through Gmail.) Google has much less information, however, about where the individual goes after leaving the Google sites. Google often has “deep” information about an individual’s actions, such as detailed information about search terms. Currently, DoubleClick sets one or more cookies on an individual’s computers, and receives detailed information about which sites the person visits while surfing. DoubleClick has “broad” information about an individual’s actions, with its leading ability to pinpoint where a person surfs.

If the merger is approved, then individuals using the market leader in search may face a search product that has both “deep” and “broad” collection of information. For the many millions of individuals with high privacy preferences, this may be a significant reduction in the quality of the search product—search previously was conducted without the combined deep and broad tracking, and now the combination will exist. I am not in a position to quantify the harm to consumers from such a reduction in quality.”

We wrote about the interactive TV company Visible World in our book, Digital Destiny. Backed by Comcast, Time Warner & WPP, Visible World is know for its “IntelliSpot” technology designed to create precisely targeted “customized” TV commercials (based on the information they know about you, even in your household. Among the targeting parameters used by IntelliSpot’s broadband service include zip code, content classification, time of day/day of week, demographics, & same user viewer number. There is also “advanced targeting”  They use “unique” URL’s and “beacons” to measure the impact of the ad ). Now, Visible World has teamed with Doubleclick, in a move which should be viewed in the context of a Google takeover. Here’s the new service described in yesterday’s release:

The combination of intelliSpot(R) and DoubleClick Rich Media and Video, is designed to provide advertisers with the ability to easily create and monitor hundreds or thousands of versions of their video creative messages and dynamically deliver the exact optimized message to each Web browser across hundreds of Web sites. For example, an automotive dealer group could feature the pictures and addresses of their local dealers within the video seen by end users within a specific geographical area.

“Working with Visible World, we’re able to incorporate some of the best practices from the television world online. By combining the engaging nature of customized video with the advantages of online advertising, our clients are well positioned to enable a whole new era of advertising effectiveness,” said Ari Paparo, vice president of rich media at DoubleClick.”

In what should raise privacy and competition concerns, read how Clickz describes it (excerpt):

“Pairing a history of geographically-targeted ads with an expertise in rich media ad delivery and reporting, DoubleClick and Visible World will combine their platforms to deliver highly-targeted online video advertising to their clients.

The deal links DoubleClick’s DART ad management platform and rich media and video technology with Visible World’s intelliSpot system, which has primarily been used to advertise on cable channels. Users of the premium service will be able to create online video and rich media campaigns managed through the DART system, yet be altered by the intelliSpot technology based on the viewer’s geographic location, to provide specialized content.

“We delivery the granular targeting of the creative message of Visible World through the DoubleClick network, but it simplifies the ad trafficking solution by saying here is a simple DART tag and behind it can be thousands of creative solutions,” said Andy Sheldon, vice president of broadband and wireless at Visible World…As a combined service, DoubleClick and Visible World will have access to one another’s client base, and both company’s logos will be attached to the technology, but campaigns will be managed through the DoubleClick system.”

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Acxiom [Echo] Targets Your Data

Today’s Wall Street Journal story on Acxiom’s broadening use of online and offline data is an important story. As we noted to Journal reporters, Acxiom has been acquiring behavioral targeting firms to broaden its reach. Last month, Acxiom took over EchoTarget, a “re-targeting and behavioral network.” Acxiom, said Greg Smith (former EchoTarget CEO and now an Acxiom honcho), “recognized” that “clients are really taking BT [behavioral targeting] seriously.” Here Acxiom’s vision for its future, according to Rich Howe, chief marketing and strategy officer [my italics]:

“We can go to our clients that are looking to tie all their marketing programs in a single platform. The largest clients we deal with have these large marketing data warehouses that are already built, and large investments made, and they want to fully monetize that by including the digital capabilities. You are not going to do away with direct mail. It will continue to be a big part of the spend for big customers. We can complement all of the techniques you have had in that world with the other channels like email and search and Web site optimization, and of course trying to leverage display advertising as a means to build product or just sell products. It is multichannel play. That is the game we are playing.”

Yesterday, Acxiom officially unveiled, according to MediaPost, [my italics] “its Relevance-X products designed to allow marketers to make online media buys using an ad network targeting specific customer segments based on their predictive lifestyle and purchase intent profiles. “We’re really excited about this,” said Rich Howe, Acxiom’s chief marketing and strategy officer. “We’re bringing our knowledge and experience in direct marketing to the online channels to give clicks context–going far beyond basic information such as age, gender and household income to include the attitudes, beliefs and lifestyles of consumers that are much more predictive.”

Acxiom also acquired last Spring a company called Kefta, which it called “the leader in real-time, dynamic personalization solutions for the Internet.” Here’s a another quote from the Acxiom release on the deal [our italics]: “Kefta’s dynamic targeting solution delivers timely, relevant content to website visitors based on their unique online behavior and individual characteristics, thereby helping marketers boost response, revenues and customer loyalty. By recognizing and responding to the different needs of customers online, Kefta helps marketers deliver relevant and personalized marketing messages in real time on websites, search engines, banners and e-mails.”

In a 2007 “white paper” titled “Creating High-Precision Marketing Intelligence with Consumer-Centric Analytics,” Acxiom explains that its “integrated consumer information management” approach includes access to [my italics] “Real-time data — Real-time interactions with consumers (reflected in “hand-raising signals” such as in-bound calls, requests for information, responses to e-mail campaigns and on-line search/research click-stream data) that is captured from across an enterprise and analyzed further deepens the ability to understand specific consumers and to predict future behavior. Acxiom ConnectionPoint-XTM provides this real-time capability to fuse these behavioral signals about consumers’ interests or demand with a consumer information database.

Meanwhile, the Journal story says that Acxiom “briefed the FTC on its targeting plans and the regulators didn’t raise significant objections.” The FTC spokesperson cited in the story suggested that wasn’t true. We need to know what exactly was presented to the FTC by Acxiom and what, if anything, was said by the FTC. But it does illustrate one of our core concerns. The FTC has to face the facts about the new realities and threats to our privacy from data collection and interactive marketing. The FTC has to act now and protect consumers.

PS: Just a FYI for EU privacy officials & advocates. Your data is being analyzed by Acxiom as well. Here’s a press release excerpt: “Axiom(R) Corporation today announced the introduction of an enhanced consumer segmentation solution that will allow marketers to grow their business through a better understanding of their consumers within a country coupled with the ability to compare those consumers across countries. The new solution, Personicx(R) International, results from the combination of Acxiom’s customer data management expertise and the extensive data assets attained when Acxiom acquired Claritas Europe and Consodata last year. Bruce Carroll, Acxiom’s Strategic Development Leader explained the difference Personicx International will bring to marketers: “Traditionally, marketers rely on country-specific demographics and geodemographic systems such as Acxiom’s Personicx product. These solutions are optimised to perform within a given country and as a result do not allow for effective comparison of consumers between countries. Personicx International changes that… The new system is being made available internationally starting with the U.K., Germany, France, Spain, the U.S., Poland, the Netherlands, and Portugal and underlines Acxiom’s intentions following the acquisitions it has made over the last 18 months. “Creating Personicx International would not have been possible without access to the large data assets we now have,” Kevin Zaffaroni, Acxiom’s Leader for Europe, Asia and Australia, said. “We’re taking existing information but using new approaches to help marketers do things and achieve results that just weren’t possible before.”