- From: Kathy Joe <kathy@esomar.org>
- Date: Wed, 17 Sep 2014 17:59:20 +0200
- To: Mike O'Neill <michael.oneill@baycloud.com>
- Cc: rob@blaeu.com, Justin Brookman <jbrookman@cdt.org>, Public-tracking Working Group <public-tracking@w3.org>
- Message-Id: <616ABA68-A83E-4F42-8C04-BBB13F3A51C8@esomar.org>
Hi Mike As you will have understood from our lengthy explanation of audience measurement, the online ecosphere, including public bodies and government broadcasters, depends on independent audience measurement. As we have therefore requested that audience measurement be a permitted use with a distinct purpose, we want to provide information to those users who are concerned, that the data is used as aggregated measurement statistics and will not have a detrimental impact on a user, so they can make an educated choice about opting out. Kathy Joe ESOMAR, the World Association for Social, Opinion and Market Research, is the essential organisation for encouraging, advancing and elevating market research worldwide. On 17 Sep 2014, at 16:44, Mike O'Neill <michael.oneill@baycloud.com> wrote: -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 Hi Kathy, Wire not just use DNT:1? Why invent another signal when an adequate alternative exists (which we have all been working on)? It is more likely to get the seal of approval in EU also. Mike From: Kathy Joe [mailto:kathy@esomar.org] Sent: 17 September 2014 15:38 To: rob@blaeu.com Cc: Justin Brookman; Public-tracking Working Group Subject: Re: Audience Measurement Permitted Use (ISSUE-25) Dear Rob, A beta test version of the opt-out system that we proposed last year is being developed and will be launched soon. Kathy Joe, Director, International Standards and Public Affairs ESOMAR, the World Association for Social, Opinion and Market Research, is the essential organisation for encouraging, advancing and elevating market research worldwide. On 12 Sep 2014, at 20:47, Rob van Eijk <rob@blaeu.com> wrote: Justin, The current audience measurement text is not fit for purpose at all: - - Changing the text to align it with the rest of the TCM would go beyond editorial changes. - - The opt-out platform that is described in the proposal is not implemented. No timeline has been given, so after 1,5 year the audience measurement industry hasn't shown any tangible results. Rob Justin Brookman schreef op 2014-09-12 16:46: I asked ESOMAR whether they wanted to revise their proposal; they declined. However, I don’t think the definition of tracking changes anything — Audience Measurement is offered as a “permitted use”; permitted uses contemplate behavior that is in fact tracking, but is allowed nonetheless under a compliance regime as something that is functionally necessary to make the web work (such as fraud prevention and attribution). On Sep 12, 2014, at 7:07 AM, Rob van Eijk <rob@blaeu.com> wrote: Two more issues that I think need to be addressed: 1. The Esomar proposal does not align with the current definition of tracking. A permitted use would allow measurement of individual users across different contexts. The porposal is from June 2013 and needs to be updated in the light of all definitions and discussions that took place since then. 2. In addition, a 'no sharing' requirement should move to a generic requirement for all permitted uses (3.3.1 General Requirements for Permitted Uses). Rob Rob van Eijk schreef op 2014-09-12 12:42: Dear Justin, The Esomar proposal does not align with where we are with the term permanently deidentified and uses confusing terms as pseudonymised and de-identified and de-identification. The proposal needs to be updated in the light of the outcome of ISSUE-188 before moving forward. Rob Justin Brookman schreef op 2014-09-11 20:26: The precise rules for audience measurement are contained in the ESOMAR proposal. http://www.w3.org/wiki/Privacy/TPWG/Change_Proposal_Audience_Measurement#Audience_Measurement_Permitted_Use [1] There will be an option for no audience measurement permitted use as well. Lee Tien from EFF has previously proposed letting companies retain protocol information for two weeks for audience measurement; I have separately reached out to him to ask whether he wants that to be included as an option as well. On Sep 11, 2014, at 1:41 PM, Rob van Eijk <rob@blaeu.com> wrote: We also need to talk about the concept of audience. I feel we need to discuss what this means. At the moment, the concept means different things in different markets. Perhaps we need a new issue to hash this out. Rob Rob van Eijk schreef op 2014-09-11 18:02: The problem with audience measurement has been that it does not provide an opt-out. Add a permitted use under DNT leaves users empty handed. For me a permitted use is therefore, how carefully crafted it may be, at the moment a bridge too far. I therefore respectfully reqeust a if we get to a CFO on this issue, to include an option to NOT include a permitted use for audience measurement. If new arguments for strengthening the user's position exist, e.g. an innovative opt-out system, please put those forward, so that we can discuss these. Rob Shane M Wiley schreef op 2014-09-11 12:39: We should agree to disagree then as the same statement could be added to every single provision of the document. Wasteful... - - Shane - -----Original Message----- From: Walter van Holst [mailto:walter.van.holst@xs4all.nl] Sent: Thursday, September 11, 2014 3:34 AM To: public-tracking@w3.org Subject: RE: Audience Measurement Permitted Use (ISSUE-25) On 2014-09-11 12:20, Shane M Wiley wrote: I believe we already have a broad statement (which some believe is unnecessary) that states nothing in the TCS is meant to contradict local laws. Adding another non-normative statement to this FACT is wasteful and unnecessary. I disagree. We have such a broad statement since the group has chosen not to harmonise at the level of protection of the vast majority of the industrialised world as well since it is not feasible to check every bit of the compliance specification with every jurisdiction on the planet. Having that statement does not take away from the utility of pointing out that a specific permitted use is not a permitted use in the context of the jurisdiction of one of the largest economies when we already know it doesn't. That is not wasteful, that is helpful. Regards, Walter Links: - ------ [1] http://www.w3.org/wiki/Privacy/TPWG/Change_Proposal_Audience_Measurement#Audience_Measurement_Permitted_Use -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v1.4.13 (MingW32) Comment: Using gpg4o v3.3.26.5094 - http://www.gpg4o.com/ Charset: utf-8 iQEcBAEBAgAGBQJUGZ5CAAoJEHMxUy4uXm2JNLQIAJb5uI3Cd9eZ95K2a2a9y2pN 78kRLIKmDIkqUgv/4heckvz9RP2aU5nc0ft4+STeqtUktkVaEgJRIE34/2ASspSU nb/Gy0aihBcLqX3amCdFMgJNqvwVJkOksOrQwdNfWFd718wHV3wgQJvGHzVDQzb8 ZCIq3N5OCd3r2lCodxXc0EvaZKLBhBFkJBlnDKpwycjDWTJWoF4PvyaLjdrGkXRW eRBGaGl2bunvrUqhePj3/LFmYWa/biigRZRjSHuQZemK8Pgmcb1Gj/jv7Nh3S+rg HmNPpMNi7MjnR2TtShQlxhitODShWdnomhGWPIi71rvTkZicTjxcjfJLKZgCnqI= =BVc1 -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- <PGPexch.htm><PGPexch.htm.sig>
Received on Wednesday, 17 September 2014 15:59:56 UTC