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Re: Virgin Media Phorm Webwise Adverts [Updated: See Post No. 1, 77, 102 & 797]
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It assumes consent to profile if Google is allowed to spider, but I don't think it is using a googlebot useragent string. So far, there has been no information at all about what information a website owner might find in their logs to indicate that Webwise has been accompanying a site visitor. Remember Webwise doesn't crawl the site in the way a spider does, it simply profiles/copies/ the browsing done by a site visitor with Webwise switched on. To detect their visit a site has to detect the phorged cookies it sets, and also the Phorm UID cookie. (Which is what the dephormation tools for webmasters are attempting to do). If anyone knows otherwise, I'd love to hear about it. |
Re: Virgin Media Phorm Webwise Adverts [Updated: See Post No. 1, 77, 102 & 797]
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They won't win if you don't let them. Move to a non-Phorm ISP. Don't think about it, don't stall, don't sulk, don't hesitate... do it now. Its one call and you'll thank yourself afterwards. Vote with your feet. Phorm still hasn't launched. Still, 3 months after it was first announced. BT still aren't off the hook with respect to RIPA, PECR, DPA, and the consequences of their secret trials by a long chalk. And even if... even IF behavioural targetting eventually escapes from the cess pit, copyright ownership will lay waste to Phorm and BT like a 1000 Megaton GPS guided thermonuclear strike on their HQ. Phorm parasites suck the life blood from content owners. I'm certain test cases (or very big out of court settlements) are coming down the line. And Phorm, BT, Virgin and TalkTalk directors will be left sitting on smouldering scorched earth wondering whether a chat with a copyright lawyer would have been a smart idea before switching Webwise on. "The owner of the copyright in a work of any description has the exclusive right to ... copy the work... issue copies of the work... make an adaptation of the work". Exclusive. Pete |
Re: Virgin Media Phorm Webwise Adverts [Updated: See Post No. 1, 77, 102 & 797]
It's getting harder to contact those BT managers
Hi. This is the qmail-send program at yahoo.com. I'm afraid I wasn't able to deliver your message to the following addresses. This is a permanent error; I've given up. Sorry it didn't work out. <emma sanderson's email address>: 62.239.224.89 failed after I sent the message. Remote host said: 550 5.7.1 Message rejected as spam by Content Filtering. I've sent the same email again via a different account and sending address so we'll see if that gets through. I can't see what they didn't like about my email - quoted below: <<Greetings. Are you yet in a position to tell us what Phorm looks for in robots.txt to decide whether a site can be snooped on? If you are relying (wrongly) on this argument to claim that webmasters have the ability to opt-out, then you cannot withold the information, especially as we are now within 14 days of your latest published not-later-than date for the start of the trials. Does Phorm use a phorm specific user agent that a webmaster can selectively block? Does Phorm look for a robots.txt directives affecting ALL spiders? Does Phorm rely on robots.txt directives aimed at Google? If the latter - have Google been consulted? Perhaps there is a need for a tutorial on the difference between Google and Phorm from a webmaster's point of view. Google spiders a site (and can be selectively blocked by the webmaster while other search engines are allowed) - and then sends traffic to that site, for the site's benefit. Phorm makes illegal page copies of a sites intellectual content, snoops on the entire (yes- ENTIRE) data exchange between a site visitor and the site, and then profiles some of that data exchange (relatively imprecisely according to Kent Ertugrul, and insecurely according to Clayton) and then profits from that profiling, and cannot be selectively blocked by a webmaster without shutting out search engines entirely. Choice for webmaster? No choice. Informed choice? No information given to webmaster in advance. Explicit informed choice of webmaster - NONE. Final question for tonight in addition to the ones above (and this is the crunch question if you really mean it about webmasters having choice How does a webmaster ALLOW search engines, and BLOCK Phorm, using robots.txt ? Easy to answer if you are sincere about offering choice. Probably result in a fudge answer if you are NOT sincere about offering choice to webmasters. NB - offering to black list websites is NOT an answer I will accept. It's not practical to run that system for the whole internet unless you are contacting every website on the planet to warn them about Phorm, and repeating that regularly for as long as Phorm is in existence. I have a LOT more questions about website profiling issues from a webmaster's point of view so I hope someone at BT has been thinking about it. It's the next phase of the campaign. Best wishes. Not getting tired yet.>> |
Re: Virgin Media Phorm Webwise Adverts [Updated: See Post No. 1, 77, 102 & 797]
I hope people are not confusing the user-agent string which is passed across by a visitor to a website (be that a browser or a bot) and the user-agent string which search engines look for in robots.txt - they are two totally different things.
Phorm are quite incorrectly looking for googlebot in robots.txt (it will be interesting to see if Google object to this). I would think that when a user on a Phorm/webwise ISP visits a website the user-agent string will be replicated from the intercepted request from the browser. |
Re: Virgin Media Phorm Webwise Adverts [Updated: See Post No. 1, 77, 102 & 797]
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Kent's Hind-Quarters. :D |
Re: Virgin Media Phorm Webwise Adverts [Updated: See Post No. 1, 77, 102 & 797]
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Stop right there! I know what the problem is... The email was rejected because it had the word(s) "Phorm" in it and went straight into the spam bin. |
Re: Virgin Media Phorm Webwise Adverts [Updated: See Post No. 1, 77, 102 & 797]
OK couple of things.
Re: Robots.txt Phorm claimed at the PIA Public Meeting that before they push a request through for a GET from a user to a website they will visit the document root for the domain to see if there is a robots.txt which allows Google access; if there is they will profile the pages the user requests. There is no indication (in fact they refused to tell us) what the user-agent will be for this robots.txt request but the user-agent for the user's GET requests will (I expect, although this has not been clarified either) be unchanged from the user's normal user-agent. re: Share Prices Talk in the press is that the reason for the latest shoring up of the stock is down to the BT trials being imminent to start in the next 2 weeks. Nothing to do with any large new contracts with anyone. re: Google Watch this space (and that is all I can say on the matter for now). Alexander Hanff |
Re: Virgin Media Phorm Webwise Adverts [Updated: See Post No. 1, 77, 102 & 797]
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If people had been rigging the vote I'd expect to see significantly more votes cast in the phorm poll, than in previous polls. One thing I do find slightly surprising, is given that news items about Phorm have appeared on ISPreview, 25% of voters still had no idea what Phorm is. Also Other polls on phorm are similarily negative, with only 4% voting here would not opt-out. and 82% of Skyuser forum members would leave Sky if Phorm was introduced by Sky http://www.skyuser.co.uk/forum/polls...u-stay-go.html |
Re: Virgin Media Phorm Webwise Adverts [Updated: See Post No. 1, 77, 102 & 797]
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This is the Internet where you don't have to have a mountain of cash to have just as much say as the big boys. Every single article that has mentioned phorm or webwise since February this year has so far been attended by teckies ready to denounce it for the nasty crap that it is. Why do you think kent's PR machine doesn't bother posting their spin anymore? Because they got fed up with being beaten and made to look stupid - we did that - Just with a broadband connection and probably no more than a couple of hundred quid between us ... See? :D |
Re: Virgin Media Phorm Webwise Adverts [Updated: See Post No. 1, 77, 102 & 797]
If only! What's Kent's personal worth? What's his NYSE reputation?
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Re: Virgin Media Phorm Webwise Adverts [Updated: See Post No. 1, 77, 102 & 797]
What's Kent's reputation on the Internet?
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Re: Virgin Media Phorm Webwise Adverts [Updated: See Post No. 1, 77, 102 & 797]
hmm , i find this rather odd, the BBC will respond and defend the DrWho trademark and copyright, but so far, not a peep about the long standing BBC "webwise" trademark and copyright....
http://www.openrightsgroup.org/2008/...-from-the-web/ "... “We note that you are supplying DR WHO items, and using trade marks and copyright owned by BBC. You have not been given permission to use the DR WHO brand and we ask that you remove from your site any designs connected with DR WHO. Please reply acknowledging receipt of this email, and confirm that you will remove the DR WHO items as requested.” ... " |
Re: Virgin Media Phorm Webwise Adverts [Updated: See Post No. 1, 77, 102 & 797]
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We work on the basis that if a site allows spidering of its contents by search engines, then its material is being openly published. Conversely, if the site has disallowed spidering and indexing by search engines, we respect those restrictions in robots.txt.Why restrict themselves to only Googlebot, what about MSNBot and Slurp, etc.? Quote:
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Re: Virgin Media Phorm Webwise Adverts [Updated: See Post No. 1, 77, 102 & 797]
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Alexander Hanff |
Re: Virgin Media Phorm Webwise Adverts [Updated: See Post No. 1, 77, 102 & 797]
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---------- Post added at 02:25 ---------- Previous post was at 01:43 ---------- Quote:
---------- Post added at 02:31 ---------- Previous post was at 02:25 ---------- Quote:
The man can get more $1000 whores than you can shake a stick at. And that's what it's all about. |
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