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HOME • MANAGE SUBSCRIPTIONS • MEDIA KIT
Getting Comfortable With Less Privacy
by Mark Simon, Monday, June 4, 2007, 11:45 AM

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As the Federal Trade Commission examines the Google-DoubleClick merger, privacy advocates are growing vocal about the fear of an unholy alliance. Groups including the Center for Digital Democracy have gone so far as to urge the Commission that "there is simply no consumer privacy issue more pressing" for the FTC to consider than the future of Google.

Enough has been written about whether GoogleClick really will or will not threaten our privacy, so I'll stay on the sidelines of that issue. Instead, I want to raise a related question that, to my mind, remains largely -- and unfortunately -- overlooked. Assuming that GoogleClick is a threat to privacy (for the sake of argument), is it possible that we, as a society, could decide that we're OK with that threat to privacy - as long as we get a better online life in return?

I'd have to say that the answer might be "yes." But before I explain, let me elaborate on the tradeoff I'm describing.

In the advertising world, the perfectly targeted ad channel is pure gold. A channel that allows advertisers to identify and reach the perfect customer can charge a premium for its inventory, because it offers the promise of incredible ROI.

That's always been the premise behind search: keywords help advertisers locate the right customers at the right times, and so advertisers will pay top dollar for them. And it's the same premise, many experts say, that's driving Google's efforts at building up histories of users' activities: the better picture Google can build of a particular user's search behavior, the more targeted Google can make its advertising. And more targeted means more lucrative.

The same thinking holds for Google and DoubleClick. DoubleClick, which has access to user behavior across huge portions of the Internet, could allow Google to create a still more precise picture of its users -- and deliver still more targeted, and more expensive (but also more effective) advertising.

If the assumptions here are correct, then we're looking at an attempt on Google's part to create highly precise profiles of millions of people -- and that's a privacy dilemma. But on the flip side, the more money there is to be made in online services and information, the more incentive the online service providers have to work harder at driving eyeballs toward their ads. To drive those eyeballs, the services need to constantly improve their free offerings (like Google Search). That, in turn, means that the very forces that may be undermining our privacy are the forces that drive stunning advancement in the free Internet, improving our online lives.

And that's the crux of the question our society faces now. Assuming that our privacy fears are real, then how willing are we to trade at least some of our privacy in exchange for a better, free online experience?

To answer that question, it's instructive to look at a recent study by the Pew Internet and American Life Project exploring teens' attitudes towards privacy and social networking. The study found that 23% of American teens "say it would be 'pretty easy' for someone to find out who they are" from their online profiles. It also found that 40% of teens think that "they could eventually be found online."

And so, according to the study, 63% of teens knowingly face privacy risks by living their lives on the Web. But that hasn't stopped teens from living on the Web in droves.

Those numbers could just be another example of the carelessness of teenagers, who risk their online safety for a Facebook page. But I still think this study is highly telling. Teenagers today represent the first generation to have grown up with the Internet, and whatever feelings they have towards online life are unadulterated by an adult's mistrust of new technology. Moreover, teens' attitudes towards new media will become the whole population's attitudes over time -- as they are the early adapters.

And so it says a lot that teens are so ready to trade privacy for the freedom to use the Internet to its fullest, and ultimately how much privacy encroachment -- real or perceived -- the population in general is willing to feel OK with.

How much of the population, teen or otherwise, is willing to trade privacy for a better free Internet? To be honest, I'm really not sure -- simply because there's surprisingly little discussion on how the average consumer feels; studies like the one from Pew are far too rare.

Instead, the national discourse on online privacy pits the media companies against the privacy advocates, without either really taking the pulse of the average Internet user's feelings on any tradeoff. And until we understand what media consumers really want, we'll be leaving them out of a conversation that, presumably, is all about them.

7 comments on "Getting Comfortable With Less Privacy"

  1. Aurelie Pols from OX2 - WebAnalytics.be
    commented on: June 05, 2007 at 2:44 AM
    I would agree with Jason Abbate: this conversation makes sense as advertisers are claiming the use fo information to better target their efforts. As a consumer, I would also prefer to be better served in order to win time and efficiency. But we should look beyond the implications of the near future. Opening this Pandora's box could lead us to distorted use of information. Thus, my questions would be "Who would the enforcers be if our society would take a more open road?", "How would the limits be defined?" and "What is infringement of privacy exactly today?". Apparently, on this later questions, their seems to be difference of opinions between generations.

  2. Phil Hood from Enter Music, Inc.
    commented on: June 04, 2007 at 1:10 PM
    I think we need to have tougher privacy laws that treat the Internet and Google like any other network (Google is essentially a network in the same way a bank, the water company or a railroad is a network). No one expects that I should give the phone company or the airlines an unlimited right to track my calls or what activities I participate in while traveling. In the same way Google should have no unlimited right to track me, unless I agree to it. But my agreement should not be coerced. Sites should not be able to close their doors to me just because I don't want to be tracked. Put another way, exercising my right to privacy should not ostracize me from society.

    I work in publishing. I spend a lot of money on direct mail and email. I understand that advertisers consider targeting a gold rush. But that doesn't make it right. We need to put the rights of individuals before the rights of corporations.

  3. Oliver Bath from I-level
    commented on: June 04, 2007 at 12:48 PM
    For me I have no worry about the media owners obtaining and using my details to better channel advertising. I would much prefer it if I did not have to view advertising that had no relevance to me. The problem I personally have about giving my details out over the net is that it increases the chance of the wrong people being able to build up complete profiles of you and use them for fraudulent purposes. I guess this is why community websites like Facebook or Myspace give you the option of making your profile public or not.

  4. Jason Abbate from Stein Rogan & Partners
    commented on: June 04, 2007 at 12:47 PM
    I agree that it makes sense to have this conversation, but we need to be careful not to dismiss privacy concerns because Internet users appear to be willing to accept less privacy. The role of privacy advocates is to look at where today's technologies and corporate mergers can potentially lead us in the area of personal privacy and to keep media consumers informed about dangers they cannot see clearly for themselves. (The lack of concern for Internet privacy among young people is actually somewhat disconcerting and seems to present an argument for more rather than less aggressive privacy.) In this industry, we are very focused on how targeting data can deliver better experiences for consumers and marketers. However, there are larger issues at stake and we should take the lead on them. So if we are going to have a dialogue, let's have full disclosure - let's acknowledge that are legitimate concerns even if consumers don't seem to understand or care about them right now - and let's make sure we don't find ourselves on the wrong side of their best interests.

  5. Marjory Meechan from Morevisibility
    commented on: June 04, 2007 at 12:38 PM
    I think that the answer to your question as to whether or not we would be comfortable with accepting a potential threat to our privacy in exchange with convenience online is not one that should be resolved by appealing to the majority. Exchanging personal freedom and privacy for convenience is a situation that invades every aspect of our lives - not just our lives online and really, it should be a possible personal choice for every individual.

    Google's personalized search services so far are fairly transparent and you can avoid the problem by merely not signing in to the service. But what about less obvious methods like Alexa and Compete toolbars for example? At what point will it only be possible for those with a relatively high degree of technical savvy to opt out of having their movements on the internet tracked because all browsers come equipped with trackers? Or, are we already at that point? Have we already abdicated our choice?

  6. Roderick White from World Advertising Research Center
    commented on: June 04, 2007 at 12:27 PM
    As you rightly say, no-one seems to have really asked Joe or Joanna Public what s/he thinks about this one. My personal concern is that the effect of extended Google tracking of what I do will mean more mechanistic reactions to what I happen to have searched for. As I'm a professional journalist (of a pretty amateur sort), I find myself pursuing a whole raft of sometimes quite serendipitous material - just as I find myself ordering books from Amazon as gifts, and being saddled for ever after with 'suggestions' which are quite appropriate for my Aunt Nelly or my nine-year-old Godson. So the trade-off I would want is that if Google, or whoever, wants to assemble my life online and use it to target commercial messages at me, that someone somewhere intervenes to apply a bit of insight into what I might really be interested in, as me, not as a seeker after some weird story.

  7. Sharon Mathias from Memolink Inc
    commented on: June 04, 2007 at 12:11 PM
    I think you hit the issue right on the nail. I am always amazed when I hear people who go to great lengths to conceal their identity online - at the last SES show I believe I remember a panelist saying he always signs up for sites with the profile 60 year old widow. On the other hand, I am also amazed at the amount of information younger generations are willing to give out. I am somewhat in the middle of that leaning toward the more candid side - but perhaps that is because I can see the benefits of personalization as a user and targeted advertising being in marketing. Great article! Definitely thought-provoking.

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MARK SIMON
  • Mark Simon is vice president of industry relations at Didit, an agency for search engine marketing and auctioned media management based in New York.


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