No good deed goes unpunished?adronbudows":3fy7dgkf said:There goes DNT...
While I think DNT is a good idea, I think as long as it's voluntary it will be irrelevant because of this decision by Microsoft. Really, the problem is lack of understanding, you'll be tracked when you log on the net by the Gov., a third party advertiser, or the site itself. Tracking tech has matured to the of constant capability to access the private information of a citizen. Simply asking anyone to not do something is generally a futile effort and the advertising industry would simply work around it.
Well, yes, of course it will be a failure. The do not track header is like putting a sign at your (open) front door saying "Please do not take anything"."[...] then there's a very real prospect that the Do Not Track header will be both widely used, and widely ignored. In this situation, it would be difficult to describe it as anything other than a failure."
It's not a good idea.adronbudows":2z4molb0 said:While I think DNT is a good idea, [...]
harmless":2f0evoe1 said:Well, yes, of course it will be a failure. The do not track header is like putting a sign at your (open) front door saying "Please do not take anything"."[...] then there's a very real prospect that the Do Not Track header will be both widely used, and widely ignored. In this situation, it would be difficult to describe it as anything other than a failure."
It will only work on those people who probably wouldn't steal anything to begin with. And it will not help at all for people who are determined to steal from you. Instead, it will invite them. (In case of the DNT header, it will give them additional information: That you are a user concerned about privacy.)
That's the reason I do NOT have DNT enabled in Safari. I simply filter all that crap using extensions like Ghostery.
Better lock you door than just posting a sign.
It will survive as long as two out of three conditions are met:drhowarddrfine":3np9fiux said:It doesn't matter. No one will be using that crap browser soon anyway.
Agreed, this is shameless pandering to the W3C. But a careful reading of the letter shows that the FTC commissioner is saying consumers who have Microsoft express their intentions have only gone half the way: the web sites have to honor the requests, and consumer expectations depend on a clear statement of intent from the W3C. The ball should be seen in their, not Microsoft's court with this action.Telekenesis":45cdof8s said:"The FTC, meanwhile, takes the contrary view, saying in a letter to W3C that "Microsoft's default [Do Not Track] setting means that Microsoft, not consumers, will be exercising choice as to what signal the browser will send."
Just goes to show who the FTC represents, thought it's supposed to be the opposite. Pray tell does the FTC also agree that automatically opting them in represents the same "forced choice" by Microsoft?
drhowarddrfine":ugucjncq said:It doesn't matter. No one will be using that crap browser soon anyway.
The FTC, meanwhile, takes the contrary view, saying in a letter to W3C that "Microsoft's default [Do Not Track] setting means that Microsoft, not consumers, will be exercising choice as to what signal the browser will send."
zunipus":1k478txv said:Seeing that in the USA personal privacy is 'turned on by default' by way of the Fourth Amendment to the US Constitution, I find these arguments to be ridiculous. Of course advertisers have zero right to track anyone at any time for any reason. They can be left entirely out of consideration as they have no voice in the issue and never will. This subject is entirely up to individual choice. Obviously, the default choice, as per the US Constitution, is for full personal privacy. The End.
Here is the Fourth Amendment to the US Constitution for those who are unaware, such as members of the Corporate Oligarchy:
"The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized."
It's simple to understand and simple to follow. No arguments are required. No Corporate Oligarchy can ever ignore it or override it.
Jokotai":2ubn6gjz said:Easy workaround:
Have no default value. Instead, when the application is launched for the first time, it checks it's privacy setting. If no setting exists (DNT == Null), open a dialog box explicitly requesting that the user set their privacy options. Click here to allow advertisers you don't know and browser exploits to see your personal information. Click here if you understand that the internet is not a safe place and would rather not give advertisers the list of the last five porn sites you've visited recently.
I disagree that this is disastrous for advertising. Just like brain-eating paramecia, they'll find a way. There will always be that 10% who allows the tracking to happen.
zunipus":3on95ipg said:Here is the Fourth Amendment to the US Constitution for those who are unaware, such as members of the Corporate Oligarchy:
"The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized."
It's simple to understand and simple to follow. No arguments are required. No Corporate Oligarchy can ever ignore it or override it.
Walt French":1dpanbyt said:Agreed, this is shameless pandering to the W3C. But a careful reading of the letter shows that the FTC commissioner is saying consumers who have Microsoft express their intentions have only gone half the way: the web sites have to honor the requests, and consumer expectations depend on a clear statement of intent from the W3C. The ball should be seen in their, not Microsoft's court with this action.Telekenesis":1dpanbyt said:"The FTC, meanwhile, takes the contrary view, saying in a letter to W3C that "Microsoft's default [Do Not Track] setting means that Microsoft, not consumers, will be exercising choice as to what signal the browser will send."
Just goes to show who the FTC represents, thought it's supposed to be the opposite. Pray tell does the FTC also agree that automatically opting them in represents the same "forced choice" by Microsoft?
Regards which, W3C has two choices: set no policy at all when a DNT request is seen (which will invite the named Senators, and others, to step in), or to set a standard the "DNT" means “Do Not Track” in an obvious way. The advertisers have no real choice in this; their complaints are similar to the screeching of animals as they are becoming another's lunch.
And why, after all, should DNT be a problem? A website can simply refuse to allow access to a DNT browser, or festoon the delivered page with all sorts of non-bypassable popups for those enemies of their revenue stream who insist on using DNT. They have no social obligation to deliver news or opinion or LOLcats to people who won't help them stay in business, and once it's obvious that they are actually decreasing profits by expanding non-ad-viewing hits, they won't.
The real issue is that, especially as more views come through mobiles the ad revenue model is badly broken. Even with full tracking, ads cost the user so much more in data, time and nuisance, than the monetary value of the page, for 99% of all ad-supported pages. DNT is merely a distraction from the inability of sites to survive the shakeout.
WaveRunner":3h9nbics said:I just refuse to buy anything from a company that stalks me after visiting their site only once. If they have that much money to spend on advertising, obviously I'm not getting a good deal.
goatsebatch":23fx1cky said:Jokotai":23fx1cky said:Easy workaround:
Have no default value. Instead, when the application is launched for the first time, it checks it's privacy setting. If no setting exists (DNT == Null), open a dialog box explicitly requesting that the user set their privacy options. Click here to allow advertisers you don't know and browser exploits to see your personal information. Click here if you understand that the internet is not a safe place and would rather not give advertisers the list of the last five porn sites you've visited recently.
I disagree that this is disastrous for advertising. Just like brain-eating paramecia, they'll find a way. There will always be that 10% who allows the tracking to happen.
Thank you. I was screaming basically this in my mind at the article the entire time I read it. If you must go through the setup of IE which requires you to pick a homepage, search engine, and forces a choice of accelerators, why is it such a stretch to force a decision about Do Not Track?
The [i:23fx1cky said:second and third sentences of the article[/i]":23fx1cky]Windows 8 will inform users of the Do Not Track preference during the first run experience. Customers using the Express (default) settings will have Do Not Track turned on, and those using the Custom settings option will have the ability to turn it off.
The whole issue of “default setting” is a canard. No website can tell whether a given user had a setting of DNT by default, changed it while visiting other sites, and quickly went back in horror (or because she simply felt it was her privilege) to DNT. The real issue is whether DNT will be dealt with honestly.Telekenesis":141iqph5 said:The FTC's argument doesn't add up to me.Walt French":141iqph5 said:Agreed, this is shameless pandering to the W3C. But a careful reading of the letter shows that the FTC commissioner is saying consumers who have Microsoft express their intentions have only gone half the way: the web sites have to honor the requests, and consumer expectations depend on a clear statement of intent from the W3C. The ball should be seen in their, not Microsoft's court with this action.
Someone, before they use a browser has control over their privacy and information. Automatically opting them in to not giving up their privacy rights and control of their information is more of a non choice then a choice becuase it is maintaining the same status that the individual had when they entered, it is affecting no change. Automatically opting them in is creating a large change of status and loss of control over the use of their information and their privacy. So using the FTC's argument that Microsoft exercising a choice automatically for consumers is "bad", logic dictates that the choice that affects no change in status for consumers is the most powerful "non choice", therefore conforming best with the FTC's claimed standard that choices shouldn't be made for consumers by Microsoft. Automatically opting consumers into tracking is a much larger presumptive and overbearing choice by Microsoft for consumers then the essential non action to their status and privacy which is automatically opting out of waiving rights, status and control.
Such a thing is hardly inconceivable; there are already browsers that vaunt their privacy as their unique selling proposition.
While W3C has agreed that browsers shouldn't set a default
Microsoft, however, argues that software should be private by default, saying that its decision "putpeople first,