NARC To Start Enforcing Privacy Principles
The Better Business Bureau's National Advertising Review Council said today that it will start formally enforcing privacy principles for online behavioral targeting.
Those principles require ad networks and other companies engaged in behavioral targeting to notify consumers about data collection via an icon and allow them to opt out of receiving targeted ads. But the self-regulatory principles don't require companies to stop collecting data about users. Privacy advocates -- and government officials like the Federal Trade Commission's consumer protection chief David Vladeck -- have argued that Web companies should allow people to opt out of data collection.
To enforce the program, the NARC intends to reach out to companies that aren't in compliance and ask them to start following the principles. If they don't, the organization has said it will publicly name them. Self-regulatory groups can also suspend or expel member companies that don't comply.
NARC also says it might turn over names of companies that don't comply to the FTC -- though the FTC's options are limited, given that no law currently requires companies to notify users about online ad targeting or allow people to opt out. Instead, the FTC can only take action if companies are deceiving users or doing something unfair.
In other words, a company that has a privacy policy but doesn't follow it might well be engaging in a deceptive practice. But if a company doesn't have a privacy policy, or has one that doesn't offer many protections, the FTC might not be able to do very much.
NARC's announcement comes one day after the FTC said it doesn't intend to challenge the program under antitrust laws. "The antitrust laws do not prohibit professional or trade associations from adopting reasonable ethical codes to protect consumers," the FTC's Michael Bloom, assistant director for policy & coordination, said in an 8-page letter clearing the enforcement plan.
Recent Daily Online Examiner Articles
-
BuzzFeed Slideshow Leads To Copyright Lawsuit June 18, 7:31 p.m.
BuzzFeed has been hit with a copyright infringement complaint that could have a significant impact on ...
-
Can Ad Networks And Advocates Close The Gap On Do-Not-Track? June 17, 7:54 p.m.
Will the World Wide Web Consortium's effort to forge online privacy standards come to naught? Some ...
-
Analyst: NSA Surveillance Will Raise Awareness About Big Data June 14, 6:18 p.m.
The National Security Agency's data collection from Web companies remains top of mind for analysts and ...
-
Ad Group Warns Of Possible Backlash From NSA Surveillance June 13, 6:42 p.m.
For almost one week now, the ad industry has been digesting the revelations that the National ...
-
Cable Companies Try To Prevent New Platforms From Gaining Foothold June 12, 6:45 p.m.
Cable companies and telecoms apparently are so spooked by the prospect of cord-cutting that they're now ...
-
Mozilla, Other Web Companies Lobby To Rein In NSA June 11, 6:50 p.m.
Search engine Duck Duck Go, browser developer Mozilla and social news site Reddit are among dozens ...
-
Will NSA Revelations Bring Added Privacy Pressure To Ad Biz? June 10, 5:57 p.m.
The recent revelations that tech companies are sharing information about users with the National Security Agency ...
-
Universities Garner Support In Battle Against Authors Guild June 7, 5:26 p.m.
A broad array of outside organizations is aligning themselves against the Authors Guild in its lawsuit ...
-
FCC Poised To Vote On Wireless Privacy Protections June 6, 6:38 p.m.
The Federal Communications Commission will vote at the end of this month about whether to issue ...
-
FTC's Ohlhausen: Privacy Regs Could Harm Startups June 5, 6:23 p.m.
Federal Trade Commission member Maureen Ohlhausen reiterated her view that restricting companies from collecting data about ...


Be the first to comment on "NARC To Start Enforcing Privacy Principles "
Leave a Comment