Microsoft Using Personal Data to Target Ads 139
smooth wombat writes "Microsoft is combing personal data with your search habits to produce targeted ads. Users who use Microsoft's Hotmail email service, msn.com news service and other Microsoft-owned sites will see ads specific to their demographic and interests. From the article: 'Microsoft executives say the system works anonymously and they won't pass on people's names or addresses to advertisers. Executives say they want to foster confidence in users to build a long-term business, and one that gives an incentive to not misuse personal details.' "We're in the early days of behavioral targeting but it's an idea whose time has come,' says Simon Andrews, chief digital strategy officer for WPP Group's MindShare, a large buyer of ad time. 'There is a lot of potential to know if people have been looking at specific sites.'"
Fish are the town, people are the barrel man. (Score:5, Funny)
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Re:Fish are the town, people are the barrel man. (Score:5, Insightful)
I've never understood this myself. Microsoft and friends are going to push ads at us either way, I would just as soon see ads for stuff that I am actually interested in. When I go to a store and the salesman knows me well enough to actually be helpful I chalk that up to good service. Why should a website be any different?
I think that the real problem is that a lot of slashdotters don't like the picture that the sum of their online information paints about them. If you don't like the picture that your online experience paints of you, then you might want to reconsider how you act while online.
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But to complete the analogy you'd have to be comfortable with the idea of the salesman noting down every last detail about your visit, including bizarre things like the route you took as you browsed around the shop in the early stages. Now this may not seem unreasonable (though he is writing down literally everything you do, as well as looking up other dat
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Most physical stores I enter actually *film* me the entire time I am in the store. I fail to see how monitoring my clickstream is more intrusive than that.
Here's the deal. When I am in public (and the Internet certainly counts as a public place) I try to behave myself with a certain sense of decorum. If someone wants to take notes so that they have a better chance of selling me stuff that's fine by me. I buy stuff every day. I would just as soon spend my money with retailers that are paying attention
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The down side of this is that if they are scraping my inbox to determine my interests the spam is really going to throw this thing off. I can see getting a lot of ads for viagra, lotteries and Canadian drugs.
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Spam has been using the advanced system that Microsoft is going to claim to have invented for years. Viagra, lotteries, & Canadian Drugs really are what we all need.
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The difference is that they have very likely have enormous amounts of personal and personally identifiable information that can be sold to other companies, and employees or groups/divisions within Microsoft who can be bribed by other companies which could very easily have emails copi
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Perhaps it is just because I grew up in a small town, but I am used to people knowing who I am. When I go shopping in my home town chances are good that the person behind the counter not only knows who I am, but who my parents and grandparents are as well. Heck, chances are good that they taught me in Sunday School and know all sorts of embarrassing stories about me.
Likewise I have never considered my full name to be some sort of secret. I'll happily supply my name to anyone that asks. In fact, I don'
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If you don't have a problem with it, fine, make it opt in so people like you can have your targetted ads. However saying that anyone that doesn't like this doesn't like the imagine their online behaviour paints of them is downright insulting, not to mention n
It's the unintended consequences (Score:2)
In the US, this kind of consumer preference data is being used for intelligence purposes as well. It comes down to the question of who owns the records. In the US it's not you. So, the FBI could simply ask MS (or whoever) for the data, and they could, if they wished, give it to them. In practice, this kind of information is simply being sold, and law enforcement is creating "fusion" centers in which data from different sour
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Here you are very very wrong. You might want to know that this "consumer data" has been used for political purposes in recent elections. I found out about it (but they want to keep it under wraps) from a Frontline: The Persuaders [pbs.org]. The deal is that it i
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Here you put your finger on the key point. It has some value when combined, with care, with other data. In isolation it is worse than useless, because it ties you up with false positives (see "base rate fallacy").
Comment removed (Score:3, Insightful)
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Hmmm (Score:5, Insightful)
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seriously, it's nothing real new. It just sounds like MS is playing catchup.
Besides, some of those targeted ads are pretty handy for the senseless emails I've been sending out about 'planning trips with friends' and whatnot - I wonder why people are still screaming for blood about their privacy, I figured by this time the majority of the population have gone to learn not to email their ssn, bank statements or tax info around.
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It's not the same thing. The article is about Microsoft using personal data (admittedly, data that is entered by the users themselves) along with search and browsing habits to create ads. This is a whole different ballpark from delivering ads that are relevant to content you are viewing at some particular moment, i.e. an email you're reading mentions cats, you get ads about cats, to take an example I noticed on Gmail just today. Personally, I'm fine with that. But creating a huge database that combines pers
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They will also scan your emails and your searches, create a profile and use if for the ads.
What exactly google does (Score:4, Informative)
http://www.google.com/privacy.html [google.com]
Personal information and other data we collect
* Google collects personal information when you register for a Google service or otherwise voluntarily provide such information. We may combine personal information collected from you with information from other Google services or third parties to provide a better user experience, including customizing content for you.
* Google uses cookies and other technologies to enhance your online experience and to learn about how you use Google services in order to improve the quality of our services.
* Google's servers automatically record information when you visit our website or use some of our products, including the URL, IP address, browser type and language, and the date and time of your request.
* Read more in the full privacy policy.
Uses
* We may use personal information to provide the services you've requested, including services that display customized content and advertising.
* We may also use personal information for auditing, research and analysis to operate and improve Google technologies and services.
* We may share aggregated non-personal information with third parties outside of Google.
* When we use third parties to assist us in processing your personal information, we require that they comply with our Privacy Policy and any other appropriate confidentiality and security measures.
* We may also share information with third parties in limited circumstances, including when complying with legal process, preventing fraud or imminent harm, and ensuring the security of our network and services.
* Google processes personal information on our servers in the United States of America and in other countries. In some cases, we process personal information on a server outside your own country.
* Read more in the full privacy policy.
Your choices
* We offer you choices when we ask for personal information, whenever reasonably possible. You can find more information about your choices in the privacy notices or FAQs for specific services.
* You may decline to provide personal information to us and/or refuse cookies in your browser, although some of our features or services may not function properly as a result.
* We make good faith efforts to provide you access to your personal information upon request and to let you correct such data if it is inaccurate and delete it, when reasonably possible.
* Read more in the full privacy policy.
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Now we know what ELIZA programmers do for a living these days.
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Equally relevent (Score:1, Flamebait)
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Gmail presents you with ads based on the content of the page you are *currently* looking at. It does not rely on any personal information about you.
It sounds like what Microsoft is doing is identifying who are every time you use any of their web services and building up a persistent personal profile of what you are interested in. So next time your significant other asks you why she keeps getting porn ads on every site she visits when she uses your compu
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That is a major distinction, and my chief concern. Persistence over sessions can be a pain. People are not, despite the marketers' opinions, single mode entities. One can be privately looking for bare boobs at 10 PM, even though at 6 PM, in the company of a wide eyed 3 year old, you were looking for pooh bear. Same computer, same account, but not at ALL the same marketing opportunity.
Re:Hmmm (Score:5, Insightful)
You keep on believing that Gmail does no such thing. As previously pointed out, even their privacy policy says different. Signed up for Orkut? With all your profile data there? Guess what, "Google uses personal information provided when you register for any Google service..."
So, again, I'm confused, what's the difference, other than "Most slashdotters make brownnosers look amateur with their efforts to worship the ground Google walks on"?
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Meh (Score:2, Insightful)
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I suppose this sort of thing doesn't really bother me. Frankly oftentimes I even opt-in to this sort of stuff. I like seeing things I am interested in (tech, games, etc) and I am not interested in seeing ads for things that I have zero interest in (donkey calliopes). At least this makes the ad-spam more interesting.
I worked in the ad business for a short time, and one of the many horrible things I learned then is that advertisers don't want to show you ads for stuff you're interested in, they want to harass you with ads for stuff you're not YET interested in, to change your mind.
You'll find out about your own interests on your dime.
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I don't normally see sci-fi scenarios literally happening, but this particular one is not too far away at all (the targeted advertisements bit, not the crime prediction bit)
I say block all unsolicited ads indiscriminately. Let's not let the advertisers think they have found some kind of ethical way to invade our heads and manipulate us.
-matthew
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I'm not really bothered by a search engine customizing advertising and other content based on my search preferences. Mind you, I haven't used the word "llama" in a s
This sounds familiar. (Score:2, Informative)
I wonder if the majority of people even care now? I do, and I suspect a fair number of Slashdotters do, but I don't think most people even notice these days. Or they've given up.
Concern is a fad. (Score:1)
No, almost certainly not. It's really easy to rile people up over something, like hula hoops or the environment, but long-term exposure wears resistance and levels of concern down to malleable levels. Just look at the UK's increasingly Panopticon society, or the shrugs the average guy on the street gives at the mention of rising sea levels or identity theft. If it doesn't directly and conspicuously harm them (and even then), then it quickly drops down the
If It Looks Like Spam... (Score:2)
Of course, it's not like I expect privacy on the Internet, anyway.
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welcome to the world of marketing (Score:5, Interesting)
They don't use this to hunt you down, spy on you in the bathroom, or brainwash you. What they do is figure out, statistically, based on this info, what you will buy, and try to sell that to you. It's how they make money more effeciently, and when done right, it's a service to you too. This is on the rise too, the best thing to do here is to embrace it and encourage companies to behave responsibly with this new-found knowledge.
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Seriousl
Service? (Score:3, Insightful)
Wait. That was... Sorry. Can't remember.
Well let's say that was WAY before 2003.
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What do you think the AdWords business model is based on?
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Here's a pretty good comment on the issue (the site name is misleading):
http://www.overclockers.com/tips01084/ [overclockers.com]
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I'm not really sure why that is so disgusting. toys have been marketed to children since Barbie - literally the first toy to be marketed directly to children. Amusingly, Barbie is based on a cartoon whore [salon.com].
It only makes sense to use science to make marketing effective.
You learned the wrong lesson - since that's not remotely true. All advertisi
Nothing new under the sun (Score:5, Insightful)
Ways to avoid being "tracked" are to clear your cookies and don't sign in to sites. Of course then you will get to see the ads you could care less about instead of something that might possibly be useful to you.
As far as the claim that a person that buys a large portion of ads could start to identify people I don't at all buy it because Microsoft states, and I trust they follow the statement given the scrutiny that they recieve from all sides, that they don't pass your data on. Whats likely is that a person buys a segment for thier ads and at the end they get a report that says, "We were able to satisfy xx% of your request in xx days". They might also get info like "If you had booked your add on xxx.msn.com instead of zzz.msn.com we could have satisfied tt% more of your request and if you had booked both we could have satisfied the entire request."
One way that you could be "identified" is if you actually clicked through any of the ads in which case they could assign your IP or a cookie on your machine to a profile that has the segment information from the ad you clicked through on pre-populated.
I am curious (Score:5, Insightful)
To refresh your memory:
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What Google does is scan what document (email or webpages with their ad code) you have open and target ads based on what is in the current page. They don't track you b
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GOOGLE DOES IT (Score:2)
Their incoming mailserver reads your e-mail and gives you things to potentially see or do with it. It finds parcel tracking numbers, assuming they're correctly formatted, for USPS, UPS, FedEx, and DHL and maybe more, addresses to map -- and also links to products and services with keywords the same as phrases found in the e-mail you're reading.
There isn't anything wrong with this, either -- you're using their service, they're providing ads in a non-invasive manner to recoup
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If you have a Hotmail premium account, you don't see any ads on most MSN properties (and no ad footers on your email either). (ob. disclaimer: I do pay for a Hotmail account because they provide a pretty decent service, and because Gmail wouldn't take my money. Free web mail is for mugs.)
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GOOGLE DOES THE EXACT SAME THING!
FTFA:
The Redmond, Wash., giant says it can take behavioral targeting to a higher level. It has begun combining personal data from the 263 million users of its free Hotmail email service -- the biggest in the world -- with information gained from monitoring their searches.
When people sign up to use Hotmail, they are asked for 13 pieces of personal information, including age, occupation and address -- though providing all the data isn't obligatory. If they use Live Search, Microsoft's rival to Google's searc
Nothing to see here, move along... (Score:2, Insightful)
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I fail to see the logic in that. Oh look, he bought , that means he must like , let's bombard him with offers for MORE of . If I just bought one, it's actually LESS likely I am going to buy that same kind of product again...no matter how many ads.
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I fail to see the logic in that. Oh look, he bought , that means he must like , let's bombard him with offers for MORE of . If I just bought one, it's actually LESS likely I am going to buy that same kind of product again...no matter how many ads.
Knowing your purchasing history helps see what kind of products/services you may be interested in either now or at some point in the future. This is more about direct marketing on a one to one basis than it is about advertising in a more traditional sense
I don't want you tracking my preferences .. (Score:2)
"Philip Scott Lyons
Privacy (Score:2)
And this is why I've given up my mobile phone, why my hard disks are encrypted, why I'm going to run my own SMTP/POP servers, and why I'm starting to think about not using Google any more.
If you don't reject it, you're passively accepting it.
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Re:Clippy (Score:4, Funny)
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Balmer. Squirt. Gaaaahhhhhhh!!! My eyes!!!!!!
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OK, that one got the "coca cola running out of my nose" award. Ewww. I assume that wasn't a chair he just squirted...
I got your specific sites right here (Score:3, Funny)
The only sites I look at are Slashdot and pron, so put that in your database and smoke it.
Confidence? (Score:2, Insightful)
Shouldn't they start with building a secure operating system, rather than targeted ads?
I am happy they are doing this... (Score:1)
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If you are still seeing ads, you aren't using adblock correctly.
Unless they make them serve from the same server the content is from and don't have the path different from other graphics, or just make them text that is part of the normal served page, I see no advertising at all.
This isn't news (Score:2)
Using search engines . . . (Score:4, Informative)
Good (Score:2)
You know what pisses me off more than ads?
Ads that do not apply to me in any way whatsoever. I do not want spam about penis enlargement, about meeting women, or about hot stock tips.
If I only ever saw ads for:
- specials on go-fast parts for the particular year and model of each of my cars
- deals on ram from brands i trust for types of computers i already own
- used sun equipment on ebay
- lenses for Canon EOS systems
i'd probably click on a ton more ads, and buy more stuff. I wi
Substitute X for Z (Score:1)
This headline could read:
Who in the world thought this was NEWS?
Big deal.... (Score:2)
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I'd love to see philanthropic hacker create a worm that updates the host table to 127.0.0.1 DoubleClick, etc.
Big Deal (Score:3, Interesting)
Yeah tell me another lie... (Score:3, Insightful)
You cannot have privacy in a modern economy everyone leaves breadcrumbs everywhere by interacting with businesses.
I quit using hotmail (Score:1)
Names and addresses... (Score:2)
Why, of course they won't pass *my* info onto advertisers. All they'll have to go on is an IP and maybe a name - it's not like I use my real address when applying for any free online services. I only use a real address and/or phone # if I actually want the people in question to contact me like if I'm buying a product online and want it to be shipped to me.
-b.
Just the usual trash (Score:2)
What, no Minority Report quips? (Score:2)
Why does this bother people? (Score:2)
We're all just statistics. They care if 70% of a given demographic searches for 'PS2' over 'Xbox'. They don't care that you personally search for 'hot naked redheads'.
Personally, if I'm going to see ads, I'd rather see ones that are more likely to match my interests. I know, ads are evil and all that, and I usually just tune them out anyway, but if one actually does help me discov
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What the...WHO TOLD YOU?
Fucking Microsoft marketers.
what are ads? (Score:1)
Ads are good.. sometimes (Score:3, Insightful)
If you happen to see an ad that tells you about something you're interested in, that's a good thing for you and for the marketer and things like this just make that more likely.
Will somebody please think of the children! (Score:2)
Should I like being a "target?" (Score:2)
So, they think of me as a "target." And they're surprised that I don't like this?
"1a. An object, such as a padded disk with a marked surface, that is shot at to test accuracy in rifle or archery practice. b. Something aimed or fired at. 2. An object of criticism or attack. 3. One to be influenced or changed by an action or event. 4. A desired goal. 5. A railroad signal that indicates the position of a
So why (Score:2)
I don't need either.
Even more so ... (Score:3, Interesting)
Last October, he was searching Yahoo for a website of a conference that was held in Sao Paolo, Brazil. Less than an hour later he receives an email from Expedia, which he used before to book travel (and probably checked off or left checked, a box that says "send me spam").
The email from Expedia says:
So, does Yahoo sell the info in real time to rival Microsoft, rather than their own Yahoo Travel? Or what?
It can't be a coincidence for sure.
Yahoo sells info... or spyware steals it? (Score:2)
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The other thing may be this: Yahoo, naturally, favors its own Yahoo Travel, but if someone does not have an account there, why not make the best of the situation and pass the info (for a fee) to competition.
Adblock+ (Score:2)
No ads to see here, please move along...
A real user responds (Score:2)
Me: Have you noticed whether the ads that appear on HotMail are targeted to your demographic?
Her: Oh, they don't register with me. I don't even notice them.
Well, there you go. True story. Sorry, M$.
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