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Tracking Do Not Track: New Ad Network Data Shows That 8 Percent Of Users Have DNT On
[…] ON Chrome 22% 2.06% Safari 13% 5.86% Firefox 12% 7.35% IE 6 6% 0.00% IE 8 13% 0.27% IE 9 5% 8.82% IE 10 8% 69.14% Android 8% 0.00% other 12% 1.97% Grand Total 100% 8.39% This data is likely consistent with what an average ad network would see daily with respect to […]
CA Assembly Hearing Privacy Policies_Does Disclosure & Transparency Adequately Protect Consumers Privacy Final
[…] consumers to send texts that are ephemeral and automatically deleted in seconds . And while Do Not Track standards are debated, the recent iPhones and the newest Android phones already have an operation “Limit Ad Tracking” option that developers and ad networks are required to honor. VI II. Conclusion Louis Brandeis, who together with […]
DNT chitika stats
Browser %sample %both %cookie %header %none other Chrome Safari Firefox IE 10 IE 9 Grand Total IE 6 IE 8 Android Safari %_browser_sample* Safari – other Safari < 4 Safari 4 Safari 5 Safari 6 Safari 7 Safari Mobile Firefox 3 Firefox 23 Firefox 24 Firefox 25 Firefox – other MSIE IE < 6 […]
TECH – Mayer & Narayanan – Privacy Substitutes
[…] Substitutes Technology organizations have rarely deployed privacy substitutes, despite their promise. A variety of factors have effectively und ercut commercial implementation. 8 See, e.g. , Loek Essers, Android NFC Hack Enables Travelers To Ride Subways for Free, Researchers Say , COMPUTER WORLD (Sept. 20, 2012), https://www.compute rworld.com/s/article/9231500/Android_NFC_hack_enables_travelers_to_ride_subways_for_fr ee_researchers_say. 9 Secure multiparty computation has been […]
Thierer_The Pursuit of Privacy in a World Where Information Control Is Failing
[…] New Technologies “Creepy”?, S LATE , Aug. 22, 2012, http://www.slate.com/articles/ technology/future_tense/2012/08/facial_recognition_software_targeted_ advertising_we_love_to_call_new_technologies_creepy_.html. (“Creepy is the go‐ to term for broadcasting how technology unsettles us.”); Jenna Wortham, Will Google’s Personal Assistant Be Creepy or Cool?, N.Y. TIMES BITS , (June 28, 2012, 8:06 PM), http://bits.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/06/28/will‐googles‐personal‐assistant‐be‐ creepy‐or‐cool. 33. See Peter Suciu, EPIC Worries Facebook Could Follow You to the Mall, E‐ C OMMERCE TIMES , Sept. 25, 2012, http://www.ecommercetimes.com/story/EPIC‐ Worries‐Facebook‐Could‐Follow‐You‐to‐the‐Mall‐76243.html (noting that many feel that using data from social networking sites like Facebook is “creepy” and makes some feel “uncomfortable”). 34. See Adam Thierer, Apple, The iPhone and A Locational Privacy Techno‐Panic, F ORBES .COM , May 1, 2011, http://www.forbes.com/sites/adamthierer/2011/ 05/01/apple‐the‐iphone‐and‐a‐locational‐privacy‐techno‐panic (“Last week’s reve‐ lation that Apple iPhones and Google Android‐based smart phones were retain‐ ing locational information generated howls of protest from privacy advocates and government officials.”). 35. Jim Adler, Creepy Is As Creepy Does, JIMADLER .ME , Dec. 13, 2011, http://jimadler.me/post/14171086020/creepy‐is‐as‐creepy‐does. 36. Id. No. 2] The Pursuit of Privacy 419 relates to online privacy, and while many consumers will un‐ doubtedly describe much online marketing and advertising as “creepy,” 37 law must be more concrete than the amorphous “creepiness” standard permits. “Creepiness” is simply too open‐ended and subjective, and “creating new privacy rights cannot be justified simply because people feel vague unease.” 38 “[C]reepiness isn’t necessarily a sign that something is amiss” and “[a]s the history of technology shows, sometimes feelings are out of sync with reasonable responses.” 39 If privacy harm is reduced to “creepiness,” or even “annoy‐ ance,” such an amorphous standard for policy analysis or legal and regulatory action leaves much to the imagination and opens the door to creative theories of harm that may not actually rep‐ resent true harm at all and could be […]
Swire & Lagos_Why the Right to Data Portability Likely Reduces Consumer Welfare
[…] limited interoperability. 280 The iPhone initially allowed only Apple -developed apps. 281 Today, its App Store places considerably more restrictions on app developers than the c ompeting Android op- erating system. 282 In another example of a walled garden, Facebook retains restrictions on what apps are allowed on its platform. 283 These restrictions can […]