W3C Approves Web Privacy Standard 12
jbc writes: "The World Wide Web Consortium has approved the Platform for Privacy Preferences, or P3P, a standard that would allow browser software to automatically compare a user's privacy preferences with the privacy policies of a visited web site."
A Mixed blessing (Score:4, Insightful)
I think it will end up being just like those commercial 'approval stamps' like TrustE. It looks great, but doesn't mean too much. Almost the opposite - any site that's gone to the trouble of filling out the damn XML file that's required probably has something to hide.
I'm not wholly against it, but I just have to ask why? Create a lot of unecessary standards and technical specs and formats, get poor old webmasters to support it and keep up to date with it and tolerate browser bugs with it, and why? Because ppl are too dumb to read a privacy policy and want their web browser to auto-read an XML version of it and auto-tell them how good it is?
Sorry, but it's a standard that we don't need. Already there are commercial tools out there to generate the damn file, because the format is so verbose. Only big corporate sites are going to bother with it, so 99% of the web sites you read simply won't activate the feature, meaning users don't get into the habit of paying attention.
Maybe I'm just overworked
This about sums it up: (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:This about sums it up: (Score:2, Insightful)
I disagree. I think that when it comes time to choose which web sites to visit, or which portals to make your home page, people may make their choice by who follows P3P, and who doesn't. After all, if I have the choice of visiting Fox News [foxnews.com] or Cable News Network [cnn.com] or USA Today [usatoday.com], and each of which provide pretty much the same information, this could be the deciding factor.
Gee, I go to MSN [msn.com] and they protect my privacy, vs. Yahoo [yahoo.com] who will sell my information first chance they get, I think I would rather visit the site that has the better privacy policy, and thanks to P3P I know who that is!
Re:This about sums it up: (Score:1)
Re:This about sums it up: (Score:1)
See it in action... (Score:2)
mr.
So... (Idle Question) (Score:2)
When will we see Slashdot implement P3P?
Legality and XML (Score:3, Insightful)
For that matter, can anyone comment on the following questions:
As an aside, wouldn't it be useful to keep a authenticated cache (somewhere other than in dreamland) of the P3P contracts I've agreed to? So that a site can't arbitrarily modify their contract and release my information in accordance with the new contract?
My P3P's different (Score:2)
This is also very bad (Score:1)
So most homepages fail. And many
Only the commercial sites
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