- From: Justin Brookman <jbrookman@cdt.org>
- Date: Tue, 9 Jul 2013 14:17:14 -0400
- To: Shane Wiley <wileys@yahoo-inc.com>
- Cc: John Simpson <john@consumerwatchdog.org>, Kathy Joe <kathy@esomar.org>, "Justin@cdt.org" <Justin@cdt.org>, Peter Swire <peter@peterswire.net>, "Israel, Susan" <Susan_Israel@Comcast.com>, Adam Phillips <adam.phillips@realresearch.co.uk>, "public-tracking@w3.org" <public-tracking@w3.org>
- Message-Id: <0827662F-3E32-4DC7-A2E0-18B12EB0A817@cdt.org>
Actually, I think John was referring to the separate ESOMAR opt out for audience measurement. So we are talking about at least three separate processes here under a combined industry standard --- opting out of Audience Measurement, DAA opt out of behavioral advertising, and Do Not Track specific urls. Hoo boy . . . Justin Brookman Director, Consumer Privacy Center for Democracy & Technology tel 202.407.8812 justin@cdt.org http://www.cdt.org @JustinBrookman @CenDemTech On Jul 9, 2013, at 1:39 PM, Shane Wiley <wileys@yahoo-inc.com> wrote: > John, > > I believe you’re speaking to the “Aggregate Scoring” element on this point, correct? > > This gives users choices – each of which should be easily exercised: > > Do Not Track Me: Do not retain the URLs of my activities across non-affiliated sites. > Do Not Profile Me: Do not build or use a profile of my perceived interests assembled through my activities across non-affiliated sites. > > Users can turn on both. DNT will be in the web browser (along with cookie blocking and other privacy tools already in place today). DNP is associated with the AdChoices icon that will be available on hopefully every ad displayed on the Internet (that’s goal with some exceptions). Or they can just turn on DNT and continue to receive personalized experiences with the confidence their activities (URLs) across non-affiliated sites will not be retained in a identifiable/linkable manner. > > - Shane > > From: John Simpson [mailto:john@consumerwatchdog.org] > Sent: Tuesday, July 09, 2013 10:21 AM > To: Kathy Joe > Cc: Justin@cdt.org; Peter Swire; Israel, Susan; Adam Phillips; public-tracking@w3.org > Subject: Re: ISSUE-25 re 5.2 Audience measurement: ACTION 415 June change proposal: > > Kathy Joe, > > I am still troubled by the idea that you have a separate opt-out through an industry website. This is confusing for consumers and undermines the concept of Do Not Track . > Regards, > John > > --------- > John M. Simpson > Privacy Project Director > Consumer Watchdog > 2701 Ocean Park Blvd., Suite 112 > Santa Monica, CA, 90405 > Tel: 310-392-7041 > Cell: 310-292-1902 > www.ConsumerWatchdog.org > john@consumerwatchdog.org > > > > On Jul 9, 2013, at 6:51 AM, Kathy Joe <kathy@esomar.org> wrote: > > > Dear All, > > In a call last week between Justin Brookman, Peter Swire, Adam Phillips and myself, we discussed audience measurement research and as agreed, here is our proposal (new text in red) drafted to clarify the principle of ‘pseudonymized’ in the normative section, without going into technical detail. > > “A third party eligible for an audience measurement research permitted use MUST adhere to the following restrictions. The data collected by the third party: > > Must be pseudonymized before statistical analysis begins, such that unique key-coded data are used to distinguish one individual from another without identifying them.” > > I attach Issue 25 with the new text inserted. > > Susan Israel, Jeff Chester and I have a call scheduled today. > > Time permitting, we hope that the amended text can be tabled in tomorrow's call. > > > Kathy Joe, > Director, International Standards and Public Affairs > > <E37DDA2E-4B64-4179-A238-4D85393AA282[18].png> > > Atlas Arena, 5th floor > > Hoogoorddreef 5 > 1101 BA Amsterdam > The Netherlands > Tel: +31 20 664 2141 > www.esomar.org > > This e-mail message including any attachment(s) is intended for the addressee only and may be confidential. If you are not the intended addressee, we request that you notify us immediately and delete this e-mail including any attachment(s), without copying, forwarding, disclosing or using this (these) in any other way. > > ESOMAR, the World Association for Social, Opinion and Market Research, is the essential organisation for encouraging, advancing and elevating market research worldwide. > > > <2D4A9A8F-B171-406D-A24C-9E25321EB001[17].png> > > > <4 July 2013 DNT W3C Revised text Issue 25 Aggregated data collection and use for audience measurement research.doc> >
Received on Tuesday, 9 July 2013 18:17:45 UTC