RE: ISSUE-45 ACTION-246 Clarified proposal on compliance statements

Ed,

3rd party trade associations likely represent the communication coding being contemplated here.  This is the behavioral promise made by the 3rd party (the subject of DNT that we're discussing) - NOT the 1st party (although they are welcome to communicate here as well).

You exactly argue my point - if codes are limited to trade association codes of conduct then the list of possible options will be very limited - thereby meeting your questions on how to bound the number of possible responses by region.

- Shane

From: Ed Felten [mailto:ed@felten.com]
Sent: Tuesday, October 09, 2012 6:30 PM
To: Shane Wiley
Cc: David Wainberg; public-tracking@w3.org
Subject: Re: ISSUE-45 ACTION-246 Clarified proposal on compliance statements

I'm not sure what "3rd party trade associations" have to do with it.  We're talking about creation of a behavioral promise by a site.   That's not limited to 3rd parties, nor to trade associations.   Creating a privacy policy is much easier than creating a trade association--that's why there are so many more different privacy policies than there are trade associations.   (Though the tech industry seems to have an abundance of trade associations.)


On Tue, Oct 9, 2012 at 8:38 PM, Shane Wiley <wileys@yahoo-inc.com<mailto:wileys@yahoo-inc.com>> wrote:
Ed,

Market forces - including regulator and advocate participation - create entropy for net new 3rd party trade associations to be created when established organizations already exist (familiarity, best practices, contractual requirements, etc.).  Could a small group decide to do its own thing - technically yes, but in reality this doesn't occur in the real world.

The goal of this signal is to communicate to the user how DNT is being implemented (and enforced) - there should be no separate decision by a browser in this case.  Users vote with their time and interaction with a site.  This allows for a more consolidated approach to a privacy policy (valid but has been argued to be too granular for users in this context) but still allows for market/region specific compliance alignment (US = DAA, EU = IAB EU).

Most everyone has agreed that a single compliance approach for DNT is not going to work globally.  By attempting to develop a single compliance approach we miss all of the great work achieved in each region in working within their legal frameworks, with their regulators, with their trade associations, and with their advocacy/cultural views.  This approach provides the limited flexibility needed to make DNT a real-world standard with high adoption rates.

- Shane

From: Ed Felten [mailto:ed@felten.com<mailto:ed@felten.com>]
Sent: Tuesday, October 09, 2012 4:56 PM
To: Shane Wiley
Cc: David Wainberg; public-tracking@w3.org<mailto:public-tracking@w3.org>

Subject: Re: ISSUE-45 ACTION-246 Clarified proposal on compliance statements

I was definitely thinking about all of the entities affected by the standard, and not just U.S.-based third party ad networks, which I agree are a small subset of the affected entities.

I'm still not clear on what would prevent anyone from creating a new compliance regime under David's proposal.   You say that regulators and advocates would prevent this.   How exactly would that work?  Who would you have deciding which compliance regimes were allowed and which were not?

And how is the user interface supposed to work?  Does the user have to make a separate decision to accept or reject each compliance regime?  That seems impractical if there are more than a very few regimes.  Or would you let the browser help in the decisionmaking?
On Tue, Oct 9, 2012 at 11:52 PM, Shane Wiley <wileys@yahoo-inc.com<mailto:wileys@yahoo-inc.com>> wrote:
Ed,

When you look at this through the lens of 3rd parties / service providers I don't believe the universe is as large as your mental model assumes.  If you further narrow this to 3rd party ad networks (initial FTC focus in this area), you'll find the number is very small and at least in the US context, the number of "valid compliance standards" available to provide a representation are very small (primarily two: DAA or NAI).  When you expand this to other regions you'll likely find small numbers of valid compliance standard options for 3rd parties.  So while theoretically you could have a world where 5 companies get together to develop their own standard, the real-world provides for a very different, pragmatic outcome.  I would suggest we shy away from contemplating edge-cases that don't represent reality.  Consumer advocates and regulators will still be expected to contain these types of scenarios from ever coming to pass (as well as industry as good actors will not want bad actors to undermine their good practices).

- Shane

From: Ed Felten [mailto:ed@felten.com<mailto:ed@felten.com>]
Sent: Tuesday, October 09, 2012 2:31 PM
To: David Wainberg
Cc: public-tracking@w3.org<mailto:public-tracking@w3.org>
Subject: Re: ISSUE-45 ACTION-246 Clarified proposal on compliance statements

On Tue, Oct 9, 2012 at 8:41 PM, David Wainberg <david@networkadvertising.org<mailto:david@networkadvertising.org>> wrote:

On 10/9/12 11:19 AM, Ed Felten wrote:
 A company that collected only minimal information would presumably be in compliance with all, or almost all, of the compliance regimes in existence.  If I were that company, I wouldn't want to miss out on the benefits of claiming any compliance regime that a particular user or browser might be looking for.

In general, there would a number of regimes, and a server might be in compliance with various subsets of them.  Again, servers won't want to miss out on the benefits of claiming any compliance regime that a particular user or browser might be looking for.
I find it hard to imagine it happening in practice that companies would try to claim multiple tokens at the same time. Perhaps they would adhere to different regimes depending on context, e.g. the geo of the user, but it would only be one per request.

Also, there is contemplated in the tech spec a "N" signal for this purpose, yes? Although I've opposed including that, doesn't it address the case you're describing?


It would be possible for a company to comply with more than one compliance regime at the same time.  Even if we consider just two of the regimes that have been discussed, DAA and Nick's proposal ("NP"), a company could comply with neither, or just with DAA, or just with NP, or with both DAA and NP.   If a company complied with both, it would presumably want to say so--if it named just one, users who insisted on the other might conclude that the site did not meet their needs.

If you consider more than two regimes, then the possibilities get even more complicated.  Suppose a company complies with "absolutely not tracking" (ANT) and also with DAA and NP.  If it just says it complies with ANT, the user or browser might not know about ANT, or might not know that ANT compliance implies NP compliance, or might mistakenly think that ANT compliance implies DAA compliance.  The company would presumably want to claim compliance with all three.

If you postulate that some users will ignore tokens they don't recognize, as you seem to be doing below, then the desire of companies to claim multiple regimes gets even stronger.
Second, do you envision some body that decides which compliance tokens are valid?   If so, who might that be?   If not, how do you prevent people from making up their own new compliance tokens?
I would expect it to be unusual to do this, and it might be a self-correcting problem in the small number of cases. Given that the tokens companies use will be transparent, advocates and regulators will be able to investigate non-standard tokens. A non-standard token will be a red flag that says, "hey, we're doing something unusual."

If there is no body or procedure deciding which tokens are allowed, then there cannot be "non-standard" tokens.  There can only be unusual tokens.  I still don't see what would stop a company, or small group of companies, from just creating their own compliance rules and sending the resulting token.  Either there is somebody or something deciding which tokens are valid; or all tokens are valid.
What's to stop companies now from writing whatever they want in their privacy policies? This token idea would generate a small set of widely accepted tokens. Unlike with privacy policies, anyone doing something outside that small set would be machine-discoverable.
This gets to my initial question: why would this scheme not lead to a proliferation of tokens?  Or to put it another way, why would these tokens not be like privacy policies, where many companies seem to want to create their own?

But, even though I think it would work that way, I'm open to discussing ideas to standardize the set of tokens, if others are interested in that. I think I left that open in the proposal.



On Tue, Oct 9, 2012 at 3:22 PM, David Wainberg <david@networkadvertising.org<mailto:david@networkadvertising.org>> wrote:
ACTION-246 (http://www.w3.org/2011/tracking-protection/track/actions/246), which relates to ISSUE-45 (http://www.w3.org/2011/tracking-protection/track/issues/45).

Hello all,

This is a clarification of my previous proposal (http://lists.w3.org/Archives/Public/public-tracking/2012Sep/0012.html). I'm launching it on a fresh thread, because the previous one got a bit wild and off-topic.

Recall that this arose out of the problem of how or where parties may or must make statements regarding their DNT compliance. One proposal, which many of us strongly objected to, was to make provision of the tracking status resource in and of itself an assertion of compliance with the DNT spec. That proposal was a replacement for an initial proposal to require a public statement of compliance, but without specifying where or how that statement must be made.

The problems with these proposals are that the one is overly strict, does not provide any flexibility, and sets up a legal landmine that companies will avoid by not providing the WKL, and the other is too loose; it allows for potentially unlimited variation in how companies honor DNT and where and how they make their commitments to do so.

This proposal solves these problems by requiring a statement in the status resource regarding compliance with one of a limited set of DNT variations. Although I understand the desire for and attractiveness of a single universal specification for DNT compliance, the reality is that we will have to accommodate some variation based on, e.g., business model, geography, etc. Examples of this problem arose during the Amsterdam meeting. If we want to ensure wide adoption and enforceability of DNT, this is the way to do it.

The proposal is the following:

Add a required "compliance" field to the tracking status resource in the TPE, where the value indicates the compliance regime under which the server is honoring the DNT signal. In 5.5.3 of the TPE:

    A status-object MUST have a member named compliance that contains a single compliance mode token.

>From here, I look to the group for discussion regarding how and where to define compliance mode tokens. My initial version of this proposal suggested looking to IANA to manage a limited set of tokens to prevent collisions. I think there was some misunderstanding and concern about how this would work. No -- companies should not just create their own arbitrary values. My view is that each token must have a well-defined and widely-accepted meaning. How's this:

    Compliance mode tokens must be associated with a legislative or regulatory regime in a relevant jurisdiction, or with a relevant and established self-regulatory regime.

I'm open to other ideas for this.

Cheers,

David

Received on Wednesday, 10 October 2012 02:56:22 UTC