Online Marketing—You’re a Target, and in Ways You Can’t SeeBy Remar Sutton, DCU StreetWise Spokesperson
Ads are everywhere—on the TV, in newspapers and magazines, in your mail, and especially online. We are so used to seeing ads that we tend to pay little attention to them. But the advertisers are always trying to change that—they want to make the ads more relevant. Now as you take advantage of the Information Highway, your use of the Internet offers advertisers new ways to target your interests and personal information, and, they hope, your wallet. In a nutshell, this report tells you how they are doing that online and what you can do about it.
Advertising fuels many websites by providing the revenue that allows them to pay the bills. The more effective the ad, the better the dollars. And the more the ad is tailored to specific individuals, the more effective the ad. So marketing and advertising companies are always refining their ways to gather and use information about you.
Here are several examples of how information is currently being used to target individual consumers for marketing barrages.
How The Marketers Collect Information
So just how do marketers and ad services and other companies gather information online about you? Here are several ways.
Cookies. Cookies are used in various ways to collect information. Many sites use a cookie to track how frequently you visit a site and what you’ve looked at on the site. Ad companies use cookies to track the sites you’ve visited. Look closely at the web page addresses (on the status bar at the bottom of the window) as your browser loads a page. You will see addresses other than the site. These addresses may be requesting the ads you see on the page. For example, an ad company will place a cookie with an ID on your machine the first time you visit a page with an ad served by that company. The ad company can then use that ID to build a database of the pages you’ve seen from any website you’ve visited; it doesn’t matter whether these websites are clients for the ad service or not—they can collect and use them all.
Protocol info required to use the Internet. Just as you can’t call a friend without knowing his phone number, your computer can’t connect to and use the Internet without having an IP address. So the act of visiting a website necessarily provides information to the site. The primary information is your computer’s IP address (assigned by your Internet Service Provider, or ISP), and usually the date and time of day, your browser and version (such as Internet Explorer 6), and your operating system (Windows ME or XP, MacOS, etc.). Some browsers send out your email address. Even your ISP may be identified. The previous site you visited may also be identified.
Registering to use a site. You provide information when you register to use a site. The web company may call it “free” registration—it doesn’t cost money but it probably costs some personal information. This information can be as little as a username and password or it can be filled with demographic information: name, address, phone number, sex, age, income range, marital status, hobbies, etc.
You may have good reasons to register at a site. For example, registration may provide access to additional information or services on the site, such as additional articles on a newspaper or magazine site. Or you may wish to customize the home page or entire site that you visit regularly. But you need to be aware that registering provides marketable information to the company (even if they are only “marketing” internally as many privacy statements assert). Another trend to be aware of is that many sites that formerly required no registration, are now requiring it. One newspaper recently wanted to know my exact age and my income just so I could read a sports story, and another site I ran across recently, required registering to get a printer friendly version.
Spyware. Programs on your computer can also collect information. These programs are typically called “spyware,” although marketers tend to call them “adware.” Some of these programs tag along with another program that you choose to download. The program that you wish to download may or may not openly state that the adware exists (many bury this fact in the license agreement usually at the very end). Other programs get loaded without your permission into your machine when you visit a website.
How to Control the Marketing Machine
The good news is that you have some control over the harvesting of your information. Follow these steps to better control the marketing machine:
The EPIC Online Guide to Practical Privacy Tools has links to numerous tools—including cookie busters, firewalls—that may help protect your privacy online. EPIC is the Electronic Privacy Information Center.
So, what do you think?
If you find this review helpful, please pass the word to your friends. Also email me with any comments or suggestions.
Remar Sutton
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