On November 1st and 2nd, the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) hosted a 2-day workshop “to address the consumer protection issues raised by the practice of tracking consumers’ activities online to target advertising – or ‘behavioral advertising.’”
For companies that collect, use or maintain a consumer’s activities online – whether by employing third-party network advertisers, providing contextual or behavioral advertising solely within their own or related websites, or even possibly displaying non-advertising information (such as news stories or business intelligence) — the Town Hall discussions and potential follow-on actions by the FTC and Congress are worth careful monitoring. There are
several areas where further investigations, and even enforcement actions, may be likely.
For the FTC, Internet advertising includes “the searches the consumer has conducted, the Web pages visited, and the content the consumer has viewed. The information is then used to target advertising to the consumer that is
intended to reflect the consumer’s interests, and thus increase the effectiveness of the advertising.” The FTC examined similar issues in June of 2000, when it held a public workshop and issued two reports on the practice of online profiling. (See Online Profiling: A Federal Trade
Commission Report to Congress found at: www.ftc.gov/os/2000/06/onlineprofilingreportjune2000.pdf.) Because the FTC believes that “technology advances and the evolution of business models since that time have raised concerns by consumer advocates, privacy experts, and others
about the implications of data collection in online advertising now and in the future,” the consumer protection agency convened this two-day gathering.
Please see full publication below for more information.