Bias isn’t the biggest danger of the new media age - 11/10/2008

What would an Obama win do for race relations? Who knows - 10/27/2008

Boring old values and the New Media - 10/13/2008

Is fact-checking candidates a new trap? - 09/29/2008

Will the media show real spine? - 9/15/2008

Slow movement toward online privacy reform - 9/1/2008

The right lessons from the John Edwards affair - 8/18/2008

The political price of being a media celebrity - 8/4/2008

A bitter victory in the struggle for justice - 7/21/2008

Does shaky start for nonprofit newsroom portend bigger woes? - 7/8/2008

When the facts get in the way of a good tale - 6/23/2008

Scott McClellan and the rules of punditry - 6/10/2008

Media regulators miss the point 5/26/2008

How to pay for the news - 5/12/2008

First thing we do, kill all the consultants -
4/28/2008

News business gazes longingly at a field of holes - 4/18/2008

Why news ombudsmen matter (maybe even in Manhattan) - 3/31/2008

Why news media must embrace online rules? - 3/17/2008

No more sex, please - 03/03/2008

Can journalism survive after the ads are gone? - 02/18/2008

The media’s Bill Clinton problem - 02/04/2008

Kicking diversity out of campaign coverage - 01/21/2008

Popularity Pay and the Age of Calibrated Journalism - 01/07/2008

2007 Columns

2006 Columns

2005 Columns

2004 Columns

2003 Columns

 

Slow movement toward online privacy reform

By Edward Wasserman

Week of Sept. 1, 2008

A curious, slow-motion momentum is building for new rules on online privacy. The Federal Trade Commission, after three years of inquiries, sent a report to Congress in June with sobering findings about just how thoroughly Internet companies are tracking their customers’ Web use so they can be targeted with advertising. Committees of both the Senate and the House held hearings this summer.

Meanwhile, technology is ushering a major new player into the online advertising arena, which has been confined to the huge array of content providers — search engines like Google and Yahoo and myriad Web sites. Now online advertising has drawn the Internet service providers (ISPs), the indispensable giant telecoms that control the pipelines to the vast computer farms that constitute the Internet.

Until recently, since online advertising was the exclusive preserve of content providers, they were the focus of privacy fears. They pitch advertisers on their ability to drop telltale bits of code known as cookies onto the computers of visitors to their sites. Having marked those individuals as ripe for certain ads, they can then follow them and zap them with ads elsewhere on the Web, sharing revenues with other sites.

Of 1,400 Web sites the FTC surveyed, 85 percent collect such personal information. Ninety-two percent of the 674 commercial sites gather data and only 14 percent tell people they’re doing so. Of sites for children, 89 percent compile personal information and under 10 percent let parents restrict what’s gathered.

Now, however, Deep Packet Inspection technology enables ISPs to conduct online tracking in a more comprehensive way than even Web sites can. Until now, as online pioneer David Reed of MIT told a House hearing in July, the Internet rested on a clear distinction between shipping and content. The ISPs are shippers, with no more reason to peer into the packets of text, music or video than the postal service has to read your mail.

But DPI lets the shippers see into those packets and, depending on what’s there, insert material that will flag them as signaling an advertising prospect.

The telecoms claim that in light of the sorry state of online privacy, fretting about DPI is like worrying about window blinds on a house that has no walls, as an industry consultant said at the same hearing.

But packet inspection is different. Using a Web site, even mighty Google, is free and optional. But ISPs aren’t free and they aren’t optional. You can’t access the Internet without them.

Worse, ISPs know everything — everywhere you browse, how long you stay there and, oh, who you really are. They can record the full range of your online behavior, and know enough about you to link up with innumerable conventional data sources. They can rent out a roadmap to where you’ve been and what you’ve done that reveals more than anything even you could compile.

The U.S. public has been remarkably quiescent about this. In Britain, when news leaked out that an advertising firm called Phorm had run secret DPI trials with British telecoms, consumers were furious, and the government declared companies would need to seek explicit consent from consumers.  

But when Charter Communications, with 2.7 million customers one of the bigger U.S. ISPs, announced a pilot DPI program with the ad company NebuAd, coverage was sparse and public reaction muted. Although surveys consistently show consumers are uncomfortable about having their browsing histories pimped, sites that do so don’t seem to incur public wrath.

FTC staff has proposed principles intended to give Internet users details about what information is used for and by whom, and allow them to opt for privacy (albeit at the cost of access to some Web sites.) Lawmakers are talking about an online privacy bill of rights in the next Congress.

But it’s a curiously limp reform effort, less a movement than a gesture. Unlike the broad public outrage in 2003 over broadcasting ownership consolidation, online privacy, which especially in its DPI form is even more disturbing, has a thin and lonely constituency. That’s too bad. History suggests that the window for adopting sensible and fair-minded rules on a new medium opens only early in its development, and shuts quickly.

(Disclosure: Despite my sympathies, for personal reasons I put money into an online advertising startup that would probably benefit from weak privacy rules.)