Charter Stops Tracking Web Users for Targeted Ads
Charter Communications on Wednesday abandoned plans to deploy NebuAd’s user-tracking system after objections from Congress and privacy advocates. Its stock dropped slightly after the announcement.
The NebuAd system places tracking cookies and sells users’ World Wide Web documents to advertisers for targeting ads. Charter had been examining the system that privacy watchdogs Free Press and Public Knowledge called a “classic man-in-the-middle attack.”
While NebuAd has worked with small World Wide Web service providers, Charter is the country’s fourth-largest ISP as well as a cable-TV and phone-services provider. That attracted the attention of Reps. Ed Markey (D-Mass.) and Joe Barton (R-Texas) of the House Committee on Energy and Commerce, who sent Charter a second letter expressing concerns and asking it to wait while Congress looks at the technology. The congressmen had plus asked Charter to desist when it announced plans for the examining in May.
Markey, chairman of the House Subcommittee on Telecommunications
That warning could effectively hamper plans by NebuAd and United Kingdom-based Phorm to expand their tracking technologies in the U.S. So far, their attempts have not progressed beyond evaluating.
Charter began examining tracking that month in Ft. Worth, Texas; San Luis Obispo, Calif.; Oxford, Mass.; and Newtown, Conn. Charter Senior Vice President Joe Stackhouse had assured high-speed World Wide Web subscribers that targeted ads “will better reflect the interests you express through your Web-surfing activity. You will not see more ads — just ads that are more relevant to you.”
Orginal post by Top Tech News
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