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Re: Virgin Media Phorm Webwise Adverts [Updated: See Post No. 1, 77, 102 & 797]
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Re: Virgin Media Phorm Webwise Adverts [Updated: See Post No. 1, 77, 102 & 797]
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Think I might pick some o' this apart: Quote:
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Re: Virgin Media Phorm Webwise Adverts [Updated: See Post No. 1, 77, 102 & 797]
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And, what is this technology which is similar to that used by the police? Last time I looked, the police needed a court order to do that kind of snooping. Who has given Phorm the court order which allows them to do the same snooping? Sorry, I don't agree that that blog is pro-phorm. Shooting it in the back more like Quote:
I am also not so sure that I agree with his view on branding either. I was very young when I first became aware of branding, probably a college student, and I thought that people were getting the clothes cheaper because they were helping to advertise them (who would pay to wear an advert?) - you can imagine my reaction when I found out that people were being conned into paying more for the privilege of doing all that free advertising for some company that they did not even work for. My view of brands has changed little in the years since: I gave up on 'uniforms' when I left school. Anyone noticed how the exec range of cars has stopped carrying so many badges? Anyone noticing the difference in food cost inflation between the 'own brand' and branded ranges? Talking of brands. The last few days I have started to see VirginMedia's new promo: The Mother of all Broadbands. Whoever their ad agency is has a very strange sense of humour, or is a very different generation. [It wouldn't be the same agency who came up with the 2012 logo, would it?] |
Re: Virgin Media Phorm Webwise Adverts [Updated: See Post No. 1, 77, 102 & 797]
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Re: Virgin Media Phorm Webwise Adverts [Updated: See Post No. 1, 77, 102 & 797]
Just to add to the conclusion from the blog
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Re: Virgin Media Phorm Webwise Adverts [Updated: See Post No. 1, 77, 102 & 797]
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Wonder if it gets 'moderated' :scratch: |
Re: Virgin Media Phorm Webwise Adverts [Updated: See Post No. 1, 77, 102 & 797]
Brains said this on Your comment is awaiting moderation. July 30, 2008 at 11:01 pm
I wonder indeed http://www.cableforum.co.uk/board/im...s/rolleyes.gif Quote:
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Re: Virgin Media Phorm Webwise Adverts [Updated: See Post No. 1, 77, 102 & 797]
To see just how much Dean Donaldson takes ethics into consideration, consider his other blog posts, namely this one:
http://deandonaldson.wordpress.com/w...click-anymore/ ---------- Post added at 01:54 ---------- Previous post was at 00:30 ---------- A list of organisations we could contact regarding Phorm... EPIC Online Guide to Privacy Resources: http://epic.org/privacy/privacy_resources_faq.html This one: http://www.cyber-rights.org/ Looks especially promising. There are also lists of relevant newsgroups, mailing lists, printed publications, conferences and events. Let's get writing, people! :) ---------- Post added at 01:57 ---------- Previous post was at 01:54 ---------- Meanwhile... does anyone on here live in London? It would be nice if we could print out a thousand of those flyers (the PDF versions) and put them on Tube carriages in the morning or before evening rush hour. People are bored as hell on the Tube and are always looking for something to read. I would be willing to cover the costs for the printing if someone wants to contact me about this. |
Re: Virgin Media Phorm Webwise Adverts [Updated: See Post No. 1, 77, 102 & 797]
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Just thinking that the same is probably true for anyone who lives at the edge of the commuter belt. Lots of people traveling to London from Southend, Bristol, Brighton, Norwich, Luton .... It is just as easy to catch people on any High Street during the lunch hour: catch them after they have bought their sandwich so that they have something to look at while they eat. Hopefully they will share with everyone else when they are back in the office - doing their private surfing during the lunch break so easy to sign the petition. Another potential source of interested readers is parents of teenages - they are just becoming aware of blyk spreading amongst their kids and they don't like 14 year-olds being offered all those adverts in exchange for free texts. |
Re: Virgin Media Phorm Webwise Adverts [Updated: See Post No. 1, 77, 102 & 797]
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10-04-2008, 02:49 #2807 or, for the direct url http://www.cableforum.co.uk/board/at..._diagram70.gif it's far more informative that you give it credit for. as the official released BT PR diagram, it shows cristal clear, to any court you might show it in, that no matter what BT have said, all YOUR DATA is still passing through the layer7 DPI wiretapping kit after you opt-out. it also shows and confirmed that they openly admit to unlawfully placing unauthorised cookies/data on your termal equipment (PC) when YOU refuse to give them permission to do so after you refuse to opt-in to webwise. |
Re: Virgin Media Phorm Webwise Adverts [Updated: See Post No. 1, 77, 102 & 797]
Reading this in the register today and it really has you thinking is this really the path our government wants us to head.
The International Olympic Committee (IOC) has admitted cutting a deal with the Chinese to allow the blocking of press access to some sensitive websites during the forthcoming Beijing games - despite previous assurances there would be no such censorship. It wouold seem that they are heading that way with the allowing of Phorm as even if they don't authorise this type of use on the internet how can they be 100% sure that Phorm doesn't start to do this? |
Re: Virgin Media Phorm Webwise Adverts [Updated: See Post No. 1, 77, 102 & 797]
Waking up to find I have ruffled a few more feathers this morning...
Good, that was my intention. hello peoples. This is Dean Donaldson. Note I deliberately did not state my personal aspect on all this, I was merely posing a viewpoint to the counter-measure . Advertsing works. Cookies are a part of the web - and you leave footprints. Whether we like it, agree with it or not - it is now here. 10% of ALL company revenue is spent on advertisng, and has been for last 90 years - whether on posters, TV ads, or sales men - because it works. Anyone think thet are immune to advertising must live on another planet, (and a quick check through your cupboards and wardrobes and garage will prove it!) but if you don't realise that you are being 'persuaded' then all credit to the 'persuaders', because that is their job. How did you find my blog? Some "automated" system that enabled you to find content - that did not exist a few years ago. So you obviously appreciate technology advances to have your voice. So are we to herald all technology as inherently evil? Is it the medium or the message? Questions that have long been posed around - or you going to say 'rock music is evil, TV is evil' and go live in a Hamish community? So my point is that advertsing and technology ARE part of the debate - and how both are combined and used is a given. You are not going to win this one by saying advertsing doesn't work and we don't want progress - there has to be a smarter and more navigatable solution. ---------- Post added at 08:53 ---------- Previous post was at 08:48 ---------- Quote:
http://deandonaldson.wordpress.com/2...ing-in-the-uk/ You may get a MUCH bigger picture of what is coming... |
Re: Virgin Media Phorm Webwise Adverts [Updated: See Post No. 1, 77, 102 & 797]
Welcome to Cableforum.
I will read your blog later today as this morning I am out most of the morning so haven't the time to give it a good read. I am one who blocks adverts unless I am looking for something then I research it online I hate what I call force fed adverts relivent or irrelevent. With the added spice of putting a known spyware/malware person in charge of what is easy to descripe as a ISP network rootkit would make me want to move ISP to another with similar views as mine over this regardless of cost to me which I have already done. |
Re: Virgin Media Phorm Webwise Adverts [Updated: See Post No. 1, 77, 102 & 797]
feesch, welcome to the debate.
One point that I think the advertisers are overlooking is that, yes, people do want more relevant ads, it is just that the system Phorm are proposing does not sit well with the human psyche. If I was to follow you around a shopping mall, just inside your peripheral vision, taking notes about everything you looked at and picked up, it wouldn't take long for you to become uneasy about it and wonder exactly what I was inferring from my notes and who I was going to give this info to. Personally, I do recognise that advertising is a necessity and I get hacked off seeing a screenful of ads that mean nothing to me. Here's the thing though, I would happily TELL advertisers what ads I want served to my browser. All they have to do is ASK and leave me in control. Control is the important factor to me. I've said this before...If a web ad agency can set up some system that gives me ads I'm interested in, I'll probably use it. It has to be on my terms though. Let me register with them, have my own personal preferences page where I tell them as much or as little as I'm comfortable with so they can match these against their current campaigns to send me ads on their partner sites. As my interests change, I'll change my preferences myself and see the effects immediately in the ads I'm served with. There's no need to track me. I'll tell you what ads I want. How much more targetted do you want? |
Re: Virgin Media Phorm Webwise Adverts [Updated: See Post No. 1, 77, 102 & 797]
Hi, Dean. Good to see you're willing to come here and discuss this with us.
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The things that I have bought myself were things I went out looking for, and compared the benefits of the various things myself. Quote:
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