Check the weather, peruse the latest sports scores, find out if that sweater you fell in love with has finally gone on sale. Chances are you've done at least one of these things today online and none of it would be possible without digital advertising. The Internet has quickly transformed our daily activities, giving us access to anything and everything with a click. And just as quickly, it could go away.
The recent and ill-informed calls for a national "Do Not Track" list, a theoretical mechanism to stop online data collection, might resonate with the public because of the apparent resemblance to the National Do Not Call Registry, but the two are similar in name only. You cannot simply turn off the data exchanges between parties that allow you to, for example, navigate from one website to another. Stop that sharing and you put a stop to the Internet as we know it.
Assuming this is not the result that privacy advocates desire, perhaps their target (no pun intended) is the variety of freely available content and services that consumers currently enjoy.
Here's what you need to know: Advertisers and publishers are not in the business of gathering and selling information on individuals. What they are doing is what advertisers have done for more than a hundred years--creating groups of users and making educated guesses, now based on browser actions, on what might potentially be the interests of those groups. Men who like sports, for example, may be a perfect target for a sports drink, but not for lipstick. How that relevant advertising is delivered is precisely how the rest of the relevant content on the Internet is delivered.
So if the creation of a Do Not Track list is not so simple, perhaps the advocates' true motivation is to attack the economic engine that fuels the Internet--advertising. The stakes are high for those that would do away with relevant online advertising. Our industry is responsible for
The industry is delivering on the promises that the Do Not Track rhetoric cannot. Think about the diminished consumer experience that heavy-handed regulation could cause and contrast it to the positive experience you get when you add yourself to the Do Not Call list. Think about that the next time you check the sports scores on your smartphone.
Read why 'Do Not Track' rules would preserve privacy by Federal Trade Commission Chairman
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