The IABEU's Consent & Transparency Framework fails to meet increasing demand for a Universal Consent API

The IABEU's Consent & Transparency Framework fails to meet increasing demand for a Universal Consent API

The Charter of the the W3C Tracking Protection Working Group (TPWG) has expired, and the WG shut down, after publishing the Do-Not-Track technical document as a ' Note '. As the Note's introduction says, there has been very little attempt by browser companies to implement the necessary Consent API, and ...

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Our Take On WPP's Media Buyer, GroupM, Comments On Do Not Track

Our Take On WPP's Media Buyer, GroupM, Comments On Do Not Track

The world’s biggest advertising group, WPP, through their media buying subsidiary GroupM have just issued a comment to the Do Not Track Tracking Preference Expression public list. Their position is close to that of some of the ad-tech and online media companies that have taken part in W3C discussions on ...

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How Fake News Got Personal. Setting the Record Straight

How Fake News Got Personal. Setting the Record Straight

My mother's family are all from Aberdeenshire where I spent the best part of my childhood. We would relocate our company to Scotland in a heartbeat if it stays in the EU. So, I was not happy when a "digital law specialist" from Glasgow, Heather Burns, published my personal data ...

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How Browsers Can Support Site-Specific User Control under the GDPR & e-Privacy Regulations using Do-Not-Track

How Browsers Can Support Site-Specific User Control under the GDPR & e-Privacy Regulations using Do-Not-Track

A proposal for restricting user indentifiers to site-specific contexts. The DNT Tracking Preference Expression document ( TPE ) allows for the registration and communication of site-specific consent, but there is no verifiable or transparent way to implement this using HTTP cookies. Although servers can stop using UID cookies when the ...

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Do-Not-Track: The Key to Compliance with the ePrivacy and General Data Protection Regulations

Do-Not-Track: The Key to Compliance with the ePrivacy and General Data Protection Regulations

The European Commission’s recent proposal for the new ePrivacy Regulation (EPR), like the ePrivacy Directive which it will replace, creates rules on how websites or service providers should process communication data and access to storage in users’ equipment. It requires that users’ “freely given, informed, specific & unambiguous” consent must ...

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The Gemalto Debacle - Fraud, Mass Surveillance and E-Privacy

The Gemalto Debacle - Fraud, Mass Surveillance and E-Privacy

Recent reports reveal that the UK’s GCHQ has hacked into computers belonging to Dutch multinational Gemalto, to gain access to encryption keys used for mobile telecommunications. They did this by targeting particular Gemalto staff that had access to files containing the keys, and scouring their interoffice emails. The keys were ...

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Discovered In The Wild: A New Method Bypassing Safari’s Third-Party Cookie Blocking.

Discovered In The Wild: A New Method Bypassing Safari’s Third-Party Cookie Blocking.

Another method allowing targeted advertisers to avoid Safari third-party cookie blocking has been found on a UK website, implemented by a French AdTech company. I have pointed out before that an early decision by the Tracking Protection Working Group (TPWG) was that servers could take different action on receipt of ...

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Google and the legal requirement for opt-in consent.

Google and the legal requirement for opt-in consent.

Yesterday’s announcement from the CPB, the Dutch DPA, that they were giving Google till the end of February to comply with the Data Protection Act is another sign that European laws on online privacy are now being enforced. European online privacy and data protection law has a long history, developed ...

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The cookie is alive and kicking, not dead, but thankfully in Europe Google, Facebook etc. are still subject to law protecting our fundamental rights.

The cookie is alive and kicking, not dead, but thankfully in Europe Google, Facebook etc. are still subject to law protecting our fundamental rights.

A number of posts have reported on the death of the cookie, like this one in VentureBeat , but, as Mark Twain famously said, "the reports of my death have been greatly exaggerated". SSO (and any log-on) uses cookies. They are usually first-party, but they are still HTTP cookies and ...

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Google, Ghostery and the limits of Ad Blocking.

Google, Ghostery and the limits of Ad Blocking.

On tracking some of the trackers some of the time. Ghostery claims to show you “the invisible web” and block activity that could track your activity, but omits to report tracking by Google. The code is not open source but it is possible to see how it basically operates, which ...

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