Trade Resources Industry Views Online Advertising Industry Has Not Lived up to a Promise to Stop The Online Tracking

Online Advertising Industry Has Not Lived up to a Promise to Stop The Online Tracking

The U.S. online advertising industry has not lived up to a promise to stop the online tracking of Internet users who ask advertisers to do so, a senior U.S. senator said Wednesday.

Senator John "Jay" Rockefeller, a West Virginia Democrat, blasted the online advertising industry for not meeting its promised deadline to implement a do-not-track program by the end of 2012. The Digital Advertising Alliance, a coalition of online advertising groups, committed in February 2012 to honor do-not-track requests by the end of the year, but advertisers and data brokers appear to be "dragging their feet," Rockefeller said during a Senate Commerce, Science and Transportation Committee hearing.

Consumers are still waiting for a do-not-track system that works across the Internet, said Rockefeller, the committee chairman.

"I personally have long expressed skepticism about the ability, or the willingness, of companies to regulate themselves on behalf of consumers when it effects their bottom line," said Rockefeller, sponsor of a bill that would create do-not-track regulations. "I do not believe that companies with business models based upon the collection and monetization of personal information will voluntarily stop these practices if it negatively affects their profit margins."

The DAA offers a program that allows Web users to opt out of receiving targeted, or behavioral, advertising based on online tracking. But the DAA Ad Choices program does not require websites and online advertising networks to stop tracking users.

Under the DAA program, "companies continue to collect vast amounts of consumer information and only promise to not use this information for specific purposes, such as targeted advertising," Rockefeller said.

DAA managing director Lou Mastria defended the Ad Choices program, saying it represents the only "end-to-end" service that allows consumers to opt out of targeted advertising. Mastria blamed Mozilla and Microsoft for implementing their own do-not-track functionality in their browsers and sidetracking the February 2012 agreement announced by President Barack Obama's administration.

Mastria called on the browser makers and other interested groups to recommit to a do-not-track standard negotiation at the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C).

Consumers should make the do-not-track choice, Mastria said. With do-not-track functionality available for Firefox and Internet Explorer users, "the browsers are making that choice, not the consumer," he said. "We are the ones that deliver consumer choice day in and day out."

Firefox's do-not-track functionality is off by default, noted Harvey Anderson, general counsel at Mozilla. The online ad industry will continue to resist change in standards for online tracking, he said. "We should question whether protecting business models that lack transparency is actually protecting competition," he added.

Some Republican members of the committee questioned whether do-not-track regulations are necessary, as Rockefeller suggested.

Source: http://www.computerworld.com/s/article/9238670/Senator_rips_self_regulatory_do_not_track_efforts
Contribute Copyright Policy
Senator Rips Self-Regulatory Do-Not-Track Efforts