- From: Shane Wiley <wileys@yahoo-inc.com>
- Date: Tue, 21 Aug 2012 16:59:10 -0700
- To: Jeffrey Chester <jeff@democraticmedia.org>
- CC: John Simpson <john@consumerwatchdog.org>, Tamir Israel <tisrael@CIPPIC.CA>, "Dobbs, Brooks" <Brooks.Dobbs@kbmg.com>, David Singer <singer@apple.com>, David Wainberg <david@networkadvertising.org>, "public-tracking@w3.org (public-tracking@w3.org)" <public-tracking@w3.org>, Nicholas Doty <npdoty@w3.org>
- Message-ID: <63294A1959410048A33AEE161379C8024F8FDD4D9D@SP2-EX07VS02.ds.corp.yahoo.com>
Jeff, I disagree both on your philosophical position (compliant Servers must honor non-compliant UAs) but more importantly as part of the working group process. Hopefully we can review this (again) at the next TPE weekly meeting. - Shane From: Jeffrey Chester [mailto:jeff@democraticmedia.org] Sent: Tuesday, August 21, 2012 4:56 PM To: Shane Wiley Cc: John Simpson; Tamir Israel; Dobbs, Brooks; David Singer; David Wainberg; public-tracking@w3.org (public-tracking@w3.org); Nicholas Doty Subject: Re: action-231, issue-153 requirements on other software that sets DNT headers Shane: I don't believe we have said such flags are "invalid." I agree with John, DNT:1 must be honored. We should not penalize privacy by design, a policy most stakeholders support. Regards, Jeff On Aug 21, 2012, at 7:49 PM, Shane Wiley wrote: John, I thought we already agreed in the working group to remain silent on this situation and allow implementers to defend their actions with respect to sending invalid flags. Correct? I understand your personal views here but I wanted to reconfirm the working group end-point on this issue. Thank you, Shane From: John Simpson [mailto:john@consumerwatchdog.org] Sent: Tuesday, August 21, 2012 4:46 PM To: Tamir Israel Cc: Dobbs, Brooks; David Singer; David Wainberg; public-tracking@w3.org<mailto:public-tracking@w3.org> (public-tracking@w3.org<mailto:public-tracking@w3.org>); Nicholas Doty; Shane Wiley Subject: Re: action-231, issue-153 requirements on other software that sets DNT headers For what it's worth I do not see how you can "blacklist" a UA that is supposedly noncompliant if it sends a valid DNT:1 You can write a letter to the vendor, you can call them out for being noncompliant, you can protest to regulatory authorities if they claim to be complaint when they are not. However, if you get a DNT:1 signal, it needs to be honored. On Aug 21, 2012, at 2:58 PM, Tamir Israel wrote: OK -- I am not advocating two headers! Although one for each personality would probably lead to more accurate profiling ; P I suppose my concern was a combination of a.) how far will a UA's obligation to check that alterations to its DNT are 'reflective of user input' be stretched and b.) whether this opens up the door to more UA blacklisting potential. Best, Tamir On 8/21/2012 5:13 PM, Dobbs, Brooks wrote: Tamir, You are making this too complicated. UAs shouldn't be required to audit applications, plugins, etc - they should, per the spec, only ever send a signal which is consistent with a user preference. If they don't feel confident that what they are sending meets that requirement they shouldn't send anything. Anything else completely undermines the spec. If you send two DNT headers, you are by definition, non-compliant (schizophrenic users not withstanding). -Brooks ---------- John M. Simpson Consumer Advocate Consumer Watchdog 1750 Ocean Park Blvd. ,Suite 200 Santa Monica, CA,90405 Tel: 310-392-7041 Cell: 310-292-1902 www.ConsumerWatchdog.org<http://www.ConsumerWatchdog.org> john@consumerwatchdog.org<mailto:john@consumerwatchdog.org> Jeffrey Chester Center for Digital Democracy 1621 Connecticut Ave, NW, Suite 550 Washington, DC 20009 www.democraticmedia.org<http://www.democraticmedia.org> www.digitalads.org<http://www.digitalads.org> 202-986-2220
Received on Tuesday, 21 August 2012 23:59:43 UTC