Re: Today's call: summary on user agent compliance

Hi Shane,

On 6/8/2012 2:14 PM, Shane Wiley wrote:
> Tamir,
>
> By moving back to the root of the issue - the DNT signal itself being invalid - then you're no longer required to gain opt-in consent for further data use activities outside of those the specification ultimately articulates are permitted, as you've not received the initial starting point - DNT:1.

I should explain -- contrary to the EU and US frameworks, there is no 
clear requirement for *opt-in* consent under Canadian law in this 
context. However, there *is* a requirement for consent of *some* sort. 
So you do need to get consent, and once the [deemed] invalid DNT-1 is 
rejected, there is no longer any way of gaining that consent.

I should also note that server implementations in Canada typically 
mirror those in the United States.

Best,
Tamir

> -----Original Message-----
> From: Tamir Israel [mailto:tisrael@cippic.ca]
> Sent: Friday, June 08, 2012 11:00 AM
> To: Shane Wiley
> Cc: Jeffrey Chester; Ninja Marnau; Rigo Wenning; ifette@google.com; Bjoern Hoehrmann; David Singer; public-tracking@w3.org (public-tracking@w3.org)
> Subject: Re: Today's call: summary on user agent compliance
>
> Hi Shane,
>
> I want to reiterate what I said earlier on -- I understand there is
> already an agreement on defaults in the group, and it is not my
> intention to question that.
>
> However, in this context, I'm not clear that where a server merely
> notifies the user they will ignore their DNT-1 signal, that this is
> sufficient to gain user consent for server tracking.
>
> Let me explain. The basis for tracking under the current spec is that
> the server is gaining implicit, opt-out consent to track the user. The
> 'opt-out' consent is mediated through the UA's browser mechanism. Now,
> if the server is saying 'I will ignore your DNT-1 because I deem it
> non-compliant', there is no longer an opt-out consent mechanism in place
> for the server to rely on.
>
> Best,
> Tamir
>
> On 6/8/2012 11:29 AM, Shane Wiley wrote:
>> Tamir,
>>
>> While I agree it does add a degree of uncertainty initially, as long as the outcome is completely transparent to the user then I believe the appropriate outcome has been reached.
>>
>> We are attempting to resolve this in the specification by appropriately signaling to a user that they will not honor the DNT signal from a specific UA.
>>
>> - Shane
>>
>> -----Original Message-----
>> From: Tamir Israel [mailto:tisrael@cippic.ca]
>> Sent: Friday, June 08, 2012 8:11 AM
>> To: Shane Wiley
>> Cc: Jeffrey Chester; Ninja Marnau; Rigo Wenning; ifette@google.com; Bjoern Hoehrmann; David Singer; public-tracking@w3.org (public-tracking@w3.org)
>> Subject: Re: Today's call: summary on user agent compliance
>>
>> Hi Shane,
>>
>> I suppose the question is what the objective here is.
>>
>> Allowing any entity to unilaterally question the validity of a facially
>> valid signal introduces a great degree of uncertainty into the equation,
>> and since this is an anticipated source of disagreement and confusion,
>> it might be better to explore addressing it within the spec.
>>
>> On 6/8/2012 10:16 AM, Shane Wiley wrote:
>>> Jeff and Ninja,
>>>
>>> I respectfully disagree and believe any standard that has outlined what a valid signal should consist of (in our case, that a user has activated this signal directly) then any signal not meeting the standard is itself non-compliant and therefore should allow Servers to appropriately respond to users that their current UA is non-compliant and therefore will not be honored - again, hopefully with options for valid UAs the user can access their free services with.  If the user doesn't feel comfortable with this outcome WHICH IS COMPLETELY TRANSPARENT, they can decide to keep consuming those free services with DNT not being honored, not access the free content from that particular site, or switch to a compliant UA so their DNT signal is honored while interacting with that site.  With transparent and clear messaging to the user, this places the power within the user's hands to decide how best to move forward.  I believe this is much better than the user being left in the dark, or alternately no publishers supporting DNT since they are forced to honor non-compliant signals.
>>>
>>> Predictability - The user is clearly messaged in all cases - so outcomes are completely "predictable".
>> I'm not clear that there is any obligation for the user to be clearly
>> messaged here. In any case, how would that play out? User: don't track
>> me; UA: server does not acknowledge. What's the next step here?
>>
>>> Only for "uncompliant" UAs?  - Yes, but this is subjective choice by the Server and they must defend their position.  Since messaging is transparent, consumers can quickly raise concerns if they feel a UA is being ignored incorrectly.
>>>
>>> Who decides wether a UA is "uncompliant"?  - The Server does.
>> You are correct that ultimately, this could be referred to a regulator
>> if the customer disagrees with the server's decision.
>>
>>> Liability issues - disagree on your assessment of liability in this case as the claim is directly tied to a voluntary code and therefore the only legal enforcement is that the Server must follow through on what it says it will (contract).
>>>
>>> Hindering privacy-by-default - It is FAR too early in the process to attempt to quote draft regulations that will go through tremendous change over the next two years prior to becoming a regulation in force.
>>>
>>> - Shane
>>>
>>> -----Original Message-----
>>> From: Jeffrey Chester [mailto:jeff@democraticmedia.org]
>>> Sent: Friday, June 08, 2012 3:52 AM
>>> To: Ninja Marnau
>>> Cc: Rigo Wenning; ifette@google.com; Bjoern Hoehrmann; David Singer; public-tracking@w3.org (public-tracking@w3.org)
>>> Subject: Re: Today's call: summary on user agent compliance
>>>
>>> I support what Ninja says below, and the concerns Jonathan raises.  There shouldn't be "cherry-picking" allowed in the spec.  When sites receive DNT, they should honor it.  The W3C should not develop a policy that permits the over-riding of requests/intent of global Internet users.
>>>
>>> The key issue for us to address is the need to limit collection and retention.  I hope we can discuss and build support for a consensus on the proposal sent the other day by EFF/Mozilla and Jonathan.  Without meaningful collection and retention policy, we risk not having a spec that can receive the support from many stakeholders (esp civil society).  That is critical to the fate of the privacy and digital consumer protection debates, esp. both sides of the Atlantic.
>>>
>>> Finally, I want to add that in my view and fairly quickly a site that doesn't honor DNT will not be considered "brand safe."  Responsible advertisers and brands concerned about their reputation will need to respect a robust DNT.  They will have to add DNT to the blacklist/whitelist systems in place.  It behooves us to continue to advance the process of ensuring monetization and privacy can thrive together in the digital economy.
>>>
>>> Jeff
>>>
>>> On Jun 8, 2012, at 5:26 AM, Ninja Marnau wrote:
>>>
>>>> We are discussing two different issues here.
>>>>
>>>> First is, I support that servers should give the users a clear answer wether their DNT request is honored. There should be an option to answer NACK.
>>>>
>>>> Second is, a company claiming "We will honor DNT when it's coming from the following user agents" or "We will honor DNT from all user agents except for the following" (I am quoting Ian's example here) is honest - and I appreciate that. But whether it is "compliant" to the DNT recommendation or not, is up to us as a working group. It is our task to discuss whether we want the spec to allow this cherry-picking. (Don't get me wrong, companies can stll do so. But will they be able to claim DNT compliance?).
>>>> I oppose this. I think the spec should state that when you receive a valid signal, no matter from what UA, you have to honor it in order to claim DNT compliance.
>>>>
>>>> There are several reasons for this:
>>>> 1) predictability
>>>> David raised this point and I agree: "Defining that "I'll stop tracking unless I don't feel like it" as *compliant* makes it basically unpredictable what will happen."
>>>>
>>>> 2) only for "uncompliant" UAs?
>>>> If we open the spec to cherry-picking. Will it stop at "uncompliant"? Or will the spec just stay silent or explicitly allow for other motivations? Patent lawsuits, harming competitors, just feeling like it - for painting a very black picture.
>>>> I don't support this as being considered DNT compliant.
>>>>
>>>> 3) Who decides wether a UA is "uncompliant"?
>>>> As long as there is no judgement by a competent authority, this is a very critical statement.
>>>>
>>>> 4) liability issues
>>>> If the spec allows to NACK the DNT requests of "uncompliant" UAs, and I site claims to "honor DNT from all user agents except for the following ..." it makes a legally relevant statement about these UAs. Which may lead to liability and claims for damages by these UAs if the judgement is wrong.
>>>> If the spec is more open ->    issue 2.
>>>>
>>>> 5) hindering privacy-by-default
>>>> The proposed Data Protection Regulation of the EC explicitly asks for privacy by default. (Art. 23)
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> Ninja
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> Am 08.06.2012 10:25, schrieb Rigo Wenning:
>>>>> On Thursday 07 June 2012 18:25:27 Ian Fette wrote:
>>>>>> A site is already under no obligation to conform to DNT. Would you
>>>>>> rather have the user be clear that their request is being
>>>>>> ignored, or left to wonder?
>>>>> Precisely my point! Thanks Ian
>>>>>
>>>>> Rigo
>>>>>
>>>> -- 
>>>>
>>>> Ninja Marnau
>>>> mail: NMarnau@datenschutzzentrum.de - http://www.datenschutzzentrum.de
>>>> Telefon: +49 431/988-1285, Fax +49 431/988-1223
>>>> Unabhaengiges Landeszentrum fuer Datenschutz Schleswig-Holstein
>>>> Independent Centre for Privacy Protection Schleswig-Holstein
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>

Received on Friday, 8 June 2012 18:39:30 UTC