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Re: Altavista
Leonid S Knyshov writes:
[about targeted webvertising using stats gathered by tracking browsers]
> I think it is a good idea, no wonder doubleclick.net is one of the
> leaders in advertising. You are shown only the ads that will potentially
> interest you, search for shopping and you are gonna get one of those ISN
> ads etc.
>
> I think it is a good idea FWIW.
>
> I wouldn't think that a company such as doubleclick.net will do you any
> harm.
Probably not. But the practice still bothers me. _I_ want to control
what information about me others can have. I do not want the precedent
set that on the Net, what you do is trackable by every organization
who might care. Sooner or later someone _would_ use that information to
hurt me.
That's why I wrote cookie jar, a program that lets the user have better
control over which 'cookies' if any they release to web servers, and
what other information their browser gives out. See
http://www.lne.com/ericm/cookie_jar/ for details and code.
> >Interestingly, I've just noticed over the last couple of days that the
> >in-line
> >ads are directly relevant to the search words I enter. I did a search
> >yesterday
> >on "Quicken" and "security" and all the in-line ads I was shown
> >referred to
> >security or penetration detection products.
This doesn't bother me as much (besides the fucking ads, which I
hate... maybe I'll make cookie jar smart enough to nuke them).
The reason is that the ads are selected based on what you typed in
to the search engine right then- there's no tracking involved like
with Doubleclick.
--
Eric Murray [email protected] [email protected] http://www.lne.com/ericm
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