According to a post in the Financial Times, Facebook is partnering with a
“controversial” data company called Datalogix that can “track whether people who see ads on the social networking site end up buying those products in stores.”
This
announcement has raised concerns with privacy advocates who worry about marrying online profiles with offline data since the purchase of Abacus, a Datalogix competitor, by DoubleClick, an online
ad-serving company later bought by Google, in the late ’90s.
Datalogix and similar companies compile their data from the major retailers and catalogers in the U.S. that voluntarily
provide all of the customer purchase history, which Datalogix then uses for behavioral targeting and retargeting.
Included in this data is the Personally Identifiable Information (PII) of
consumers, including name, address, phone number and in many cases, email address. In this manner, Datalogix has compiled purchase information on over 70 million U.S. households.
So how does
the Facebook deal work?
Essentially, for a set of marketers, Facebook is sending over the Facebook IDs and signing up email addresses of people who have seen a particular ad.
Datalogix then matches that email address to its compiled database by email address, to determine whether that individual actually bought the product featured in the ad.
Datalogix also
appears to create some sort of holdout sample or control group of people who did not see the ad. Now, Datalogix can report on the increase of purchases of that product in the group that has seen
the ad and those that haven’t, providing an extremely rough measure of the effectiveness of seeing that ad on the social network.
To Facebook and the marketers that advertise there, the
consumers will remain anonymous. Datalogix is not -- as far as we can tell -- doing anything other than analyzing data and reporting results.
Is this an invasion of privacy? Certainly --
but it may be legal, depending on the TOS. Facebook is, after all, providing Facebook user IDs and email addresses to a third-party firm, but was there consent given long ago when people signed up?
I'll leave that to the legal experts.
Is it a bigger invasion of privacy than the actual retailers sending detailed purchase data to third party firms without end user consent? Certainly
not -- but that practice has been in place for decades, and it is considered standard operating procedure. Is it a dangerous invasion of privacy? On the surface, no -- as consumer data is kept
anonymous both from Facebook and the marketers themselves.
What is lost beneath the surface here is that this partnership makes Datalogix much more powerful, as it is being paid to attach
Facebook user IDs to its already vast proprietary database of purchase information.
While we are sure that Facebook has instituted all kinds of contractual controls over how or even if
Datalogix can use that data, we are coming ever closer to the day when all data about everyone who uses the Internet or shops in stores is fully connected together.
Facebook’s very
revenue model is under attack, as this recently published article in
Barron’s points out. Facebook is therefore making aggressive changes to
its marketing toolkit in an effort to drive even more advertising revenue. In order to be effective for its advertisers, Facebook must continually expose more and more data about its users, and cross
over that line of privacy in new and innovative ways.
This partnership with Datalogix is fairly innocuous on the surface -- but it is just another indication that if Facebook is to
survive and thrive, it must do so by exposing its users to brand marketers.