| There is one
particular issue that relates specifically to the
web and your surfing, buying and e-mailing habits. You should
know by now that every site you visit can place a "cookie"
on your hardrive which will record a few crumbs of information
about you.
This is harmless enough at first glance when all they seem
to
care about is the time, date, length of stay and pages you
visited
at their site. But when you know that advertisers that serve
ads
from the sites you visit can also track your visit, link
it to
other stored data about you gathered at other sites and
finally
to any other information they have stored about you, how
do you
feel?
This means that the harmless little "session number"
or "state data" gathered about you from every
site you've
ever visited, every product you've ever purchased online
and every
banner you've ever clicked on is stored in the database
of the
ad server and distributed to it's clients!
http://www.doubleclick.net:80/us/corporate/privacy/privacy/ad-cookie/
cookies.asp?asp_object_1=& >To learn how to disable
cookies on your computer, click above.
Information provided by the largest cookie bakery on the
web,
DoubleClick It is possible to set your browser to the "Do
Not
Accept Any Cookies" option. I recommend you try it
once, if
only for the enlightenment about how many sources are
collecting information about you. Some web pages will send
as many as a dozen requests for cookies and many web sites
tell you flatly that in order to use their online service
"cookies must be enabled on your browser" to use
the site.
It gets tiring and frustrating clicking the "OK"
button
in the warning box that appears each time your browser detects
a request to set a cookie on your hard drive, if you've
checked
the "notify me" option in preferences.
If you want to get a clearer picture of how cookies can
be used
to invade your privacy, I recommend an amazing demonstration
of
how you can be followed around the web without your knowledge.
Privacy.net has set up a demo at:
< http://www.privacy.net/track/ >
You'll see how providing information in bits and pieces
to multiple
web sites creates a cumulative database on your travels,
habits
and preferences online. Prepare to be mildly miffed or fully
outraged,
depending on your level of concern with invasion of privacy.
It is becoming increasingly complex to keep your private
information
to yourself. The biggest advertisers online have created
a method
which involves cookies which stop new cookies. You must
get yourself
a set of "No Cookies For Me" cookies from a group
set
up by this online advertising brain trust. Now ya gotta
have a
new cookie to avoid getting any more cookies.
No really, I couldn't eat another bite, please! If you'd
like to follow this recipe for avoiding advertiser spying
on your surfing habits, visit the Network Advertising Initiative
web site and go to the
< http://www.networkadvertising.org/optout_nonppii.asp
>
OPT OUT page, which gives you the option to tick boxes
to
opt out of cookies served by the largest six online ad servers,
DoubleClick
Engage
24/7 Media
Matchlogic
Avenue A
L90 Inc.
OK, now you're outta there, right? No, not necessarily.
You've opted
out but you use your wifes' computer or you use a different
browser
to visit sites that serve the cookies you don't want, so
you have
to visit the OPT OUT page again and check off those boxes
for every
computer and every browser you use. This could get a bit
tedious!
Most surfers don't know that the browser launched by their
service
provider might be different from the built-in browser launched
by
their operating system on start-up by the system. The ISP
provided
browser is yet another version. Which one are you using
now and
on which computer and did you visit the OPT OUT page with
this one?
Fortunately, the NAI has set up a way for you to tell by
going to
the verification page, which looks for those opt-out cookies
and
verifies that you have them for each of the participating
ad networks.
If you don't, you can go back to the OPT OUT page and get
new OPT
OUT cookies. If that still doesn't work, you can go complain
to
someone set up to police the activity of these cookie monsters.
Guess who arranged for this compliance service? Those same
advertisers. HMMMM. Well it's better than nothing. Just
visit the
Arthur Anderson site called < http://www.andersencompliance.com/
>
Now you've filed a complaint and you can feel all better
about it
right? Well only if they get a volume of complaints that
suggests
a "significant" problem has occurred based on
the number of complaints
filed, then they'll conduct an investigation. Man that's
a relief!
I wonder if those ad networks will keep paying these guys
to tell
them when they've gotten a significant number of complaints?
I wonder
how much they pay for this service and who monitors the
people they
are paying to tell them what they'd like to hear? They'd
probably
stop paying me if I played this role, because I'd be telling
them
every time a single complaint was lodged.
No thank you, I couldn't eat another bite!
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