ISPs endorse user opt-in on Web tracking, deflect calls for privacy laws
Three top ISPs tell senators they can police themselves on behavioral advertising
IDG News Service - WASHINGTON — Three of the four largest Internet service providers in the U.S. promised today that they will adopt policies requiring them to get meaningful permission from customers before tracking their online activities for targeted advertising purposes.
But the ISPs also took the opportunity to tell federal lawmakers at a U.S. Senate committee hearing that new legislation aimed at protecting online privacy isn't needed at this point.
Despite a flurry of concerns that have been raised in recent months about ISPs tracking the online activities of their subscribers, Congress should give the industry time to develop a set of best practices for behavioral advertising and data collection, said Tom Tauke, executive vice president of public affairs, policy and communications at Verizon Communications Inc.
"At this juncture, we aren't prepared to endorse legislation," Tauke told members of the Senate Committee on Commerce, Science & Transportation. Verizon has recruited other ISPs and online businesses to join a group focused on drafting best practices, Tauke said, adding that the group expects to draft some preliminary guidelines by year's end.
Tauke and representatives of AT&T Inc. and Time Warner Cable testified that their companies currently don't engage in behavioral advertising that uses data about the online activities of individual users to deliver contextual ads to them. The ISPs said that if they do decide to start behavioral advertising programs, they will give customers detailed descriptions of the programs and ask for explicit permission before they start tracking activities and collecting usage data.
Since late last year, a handful of ISPs have run trials or signed up to use a subscriber-tracking and targeted advertising service from NebuAd Inc. But privacy advocates have protested, saying that NebuAd's techniques, including the deep-packet inspection of Web traffic, could be illegal. In addition, NebuAd's business model required the customers of ISPs to opt out of the online tracking, instead of asking them to opt in.
In June, broadband services provider Charter Communications Inc. suspended its trial of NebuAd's service because of the privacy concerns. The following month, several lawmakers called on NebuAd to switch to an opt-in approach on its privacy notifications. And earlier this month, NebuAd said it was delaying its ISP behavioral advertising program while Congress looks at the issue.
But even a simple click-yes-to-opt-in model isn't comprehensive enough, Tauke said at today's Senate hearing. In many cases, Web users agree to something without reading the fine print, he said, adding that an opt-in approach needs to be conspicuous, lay out the options in detail and allow customers to opt out later if they change their minds.



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