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Re: Virgin Media Phorm Webwise Adverts [Updated: See Post No. 1, 77, 102 & 797]
on this whole technology thing I'd love to know how many people who own PVR's (Sky+, V+ etc) do NOT fast forward through adverts in programmes they have recorded.
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Re: Virgin Media Phorm Webwise Adverts [Updated: See Post No. 1, 77, 102 & 797]
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Phorm is not progress,it is far too intrusive, it is a retrograde step back towards spyware. Advertising works if people see it, when advertising on the web starts to annoy people they will block it. Quote:
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Re: Virgin Media Phorm Webwise Adverts [Updated: See Post No. 1, 77, 102 & 797]
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However, a protracted debate on this specific subject (whilst I can see the merit in it as a discussion, and would certainly encourage it as a topic of debate elsewhere on CF) wouldn't actually be relevant to the issue of Phorm/WebWise and their implementation, or to the debate for/against it ;) |
Re: Virgin Media Phorm Webwise Adverts [Updated: See Post No. 1, 77, 102 & 797]
Hi Feesch welcome.
We are not luddites and loombreakers we are called geeks by some because of our love of the technology ,This debate is mainly about choice and the way one ISP in particular has ignored peoples privacy and it was not until there underhandedness was made public that the issues arose.IT (acym Information tech) is a typical way that function creep has now led it to be akin to AT(advertising Tech).When you steal peoples right to choose then you must accept the consequences not sit in the corner sulking and spreading untruths,like a spoilt brat(KE). Tarquin G Loombreaker-Smythe. |
Re: Virgin Media Phorm Webwise Adverts [Updated: See Post No. 1, 77, 102 & 797]
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Great advertising understands the underlying needs of customers. It doesn't need to stalk people to persuade them. Quote:
However, for an economy to work properly, you require private, secure, and trustworthy communication services. If you deny those principles, a society will reinstate them for themselves, for example by encrypting data, and communicating & trading in secret. It has profound implications for Government; how do you detect criminal misconduct in such a situation? There have to be limits on marketing, else why not break down my front door, take an inventory of my living room, and decide whether I need a new TV and sofa. Communication interception by private companies for targeted advertising is obscene, and crosses the line for me. |
Re: Virgin Media Phorm Webwise Adverts [Updated: See Post No. 1, 77, 102 & 797]
feesch
I'm not sure where you're getting the idea that the majority of people opposed to Phorm's intrusive technology are somehow anti-technology luddites, and believe the advertising doesn't work. Either you genuinely misunderstand our arguments or you are being disingenuous. To re-enforce what's already been said, we are not anti-technologists or luddites. In fact, many of us are 'geeks'. We love IT and technology. Many of us work in IT or technology related fields and hold degrees in IT or technology. Secondly, we did not say that advertising doesn't work (though many of us, myself included, studiously avoid advertising whenever possible). What we are opposed to is the method of advertising delivery used by Phorm. The technology is intrusive and almost certainly illegal. Finally, you claim to be concerned about the ethical side of marketing. What do you think of BTs covert trials using Phorm's technology in 2006 and 2007, and BTs subsequent lies about it? Do you think the 'product' which 121Media produced called 'PeopleOnPage' was ethical? If so, do you disagree with the decision of anti-virus companies to label it 'Spyware'? Finally, do you think it was appropriate/ethical for Kent/Phorm to organise a 'Town Hall Meeting' with technologists and the press in order to have an 'open debate' about Phorm, claim that the whole event will be filmed and released on the web shortly afterwards, and then subsequently refuse to release the video when the meeting put Phorm in a bad light? I'm genuinely interested in your responses to these questions. Do you talk to Kent often? Have you discussed these things? |
Re: Virgin Media Phorm Webwise Adverts [Updated: See Post No. 1, 77, 102 & 797]
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My objection to Phorm/Webwise is not an objection to tracking per se. It is an objection to the technology being used to carry out the tracking, and the technology being used to present the targetted ads. I am fully aware that I am tracked on the internet, on the road, by my mobile, when I shop with my store card, and perhaps also even when I walk round the supermarket should certain wireless technology be widely adopted in packaging. I am not naive. It is an objection to the use of DPI and Layer 7 for commercial purposes such as behavioural targetted advertising, involving the monitoring of my entire data stream when on the internet. It is an objection to companies with dubious ethical histories being given access to the entire data stream of a massive ISP, including my data stream without my informed consent. It is an objection to my ISP conducting illegal covert trials without my consent and being untruthful about it. Adverts, and targetted adverts, are a related but different issue. I already am able to make an individual choice regarding what adverts I choose to see while browsing. I am already able to make an individual choice as to whether I allow all cookies, individual cookies, and third party cookies. I am already able to block any domain I wish from either setting cookies or by adding it to my hosts file. I don't object to adverts, I just actually watch,see,read very very few of them - on any medium. In all the other areas I am aware of, where behavioural targetting occurs I am able to make an informed choice - (store cards, Nectar cards and such like). With Phorm/Webwise DPI my choice is negated, and all my data stream is intercepted whether I like it or not. My ISP is giving me NO choice about this technology being inserted between me and the internet. My data stream will pass through this technology whether I am opted out or in of Webwise. Their own diagrams make this clear, and I'm afraid I don't trust them with that amount of access to my data stream. I have good cause to mistrust them. I also object as a webmaster (of charity sites), to this technology intercepting and exploiting the data stream between my site and my site visitors. I also object to this technology forging cookies from my sites that purport to come from my site, and doing so in contravention of my site privacy policy, my legal rights, and my publicly viewable site terms and conditions. I also object to this technology "assuming" that if I allow google web crawling bots access to my site, that I also want the Webwise technology to intercept my datastream, forge cookies, copy my site content and exploit the unique personal data exchange I have with my site visitors for THEIR commercial gain with no payment to me. I have been unable to get any satisfactory answers from my ISP or Phorm to the above points. They have supplied answers, but they are fudges, and ignore all the key issues I have raised above. They are deceptive answers. I am not prepared to be diverted into a discussion about the trends in advertising, until my own reasonable questions have been answered. My ISP and their lawyers seem unable to answer the questions. |
Re: Virgin Media Phorm Webwise Adverts [Updated: See Post No. 1, 77, 102 & 797]
Feesch has a very nicely written blog but it is irrelevent to this discussion.
We are discussing whether or not it is acceptable and legal for any company or organisation to intercept our web-traffic and process that data in order to profile us for any reason without a warrant being issued based on a specific requirement pertaining to the individual. The fact that one potential use for such systems is to deliver targetted advertising is only relevent because that is Phorm's stated purpose but the financial benefit to ISPs, advertising companies and High St brands is neither here nor there especially since the ISPs - the only group that we are contractually involved with - have not made any claims or statements regarding the use of any income derived from this system. Feesch's case boils down to a single statement - DPI should be used because it can make a lot of money for a few people involved in sales. Don't let these people draw attention away from the core issue - our right as law-abiding citizens to chose who has access to our personal information regardless of why they want it or how they plan to use it. |
Re: Virgin Media Phorm Webwise Adverts [Updated: See Post No. 1, 77, 102 & 797]
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Couldn't have said it better myself I still haven't had time to read this blog but snippets are coming to light and I wonder just where the main body of the information generated from. |
Re: Virgin Media Phorm Webwise Adverts [Updated: See Post No. 1, 77, 102 & 797]
Hi Dean - a few weeks back I made a post which related to the history of one of the tracking scripts. Even though I linked to a google cache, when people visited the page they had malware download warnings.
The big problem is that for the last 4/5 years, adverts relying on javascripts, etc have been associated with the downloading of malware and rootkits. DPI is seen in the same light as that malware and rootkits. The risks are the origins of the adblockers, cookie removal/blocking and hosts file restrictions far more than the adverts themselves. My personal view is that the advertising industry needs to clean up its act and start to use methods which do not expose anyone viewing ads to such risks, not look for methods to increase those risks. And DPI is a method too far. Ad delivery needs to go back to what it was doing before the malware and rootkits got added by the hackers. Give us adverts backed by a secure system. For current technology that means that a lot of the current ads are not acceptable: no gifs, no flash, no javascript. Spend the development money on a secure delivery system, needs to be developed from scratch. |
Re: Virgin Media Phorm Webwise Adverts [Updated: See Post No. 1, 77, 102 & 797]
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gnilddif ---------- Post added at 13:37 ---------- Previous post was at 13:33 ---------- Quote:
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Re: Virgin Media Phorm Webwise Adverts [Updated: See Post No. 1, 77, 102 & 797]
Over on the reg there is an artilce about Google Street view in the UK, their chat with the ICO and how the ICO is satisfied with what Google plans to do. Fair enough. The part that is kinda of odd is what Simon Davies of Privacy International has to say. Where do we know him from.
Quote for the reg article: Quote:
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Re: Virgin Media Phorm Webwise Adverts [Updated: See Post No. 1, 77, 102 & 797]
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The Australian one is sold to the community as a porn filter and as protection for children. It is also proposed that it is opt-out. The range of sites to be blocked has yet to be published. It's censorship in any case. Purely political to placate a single member of our Senate who happens to hold the balance of power and is a member of a somewhat puritanical religious group. It is still in testing in lab conditions. Dephormation Pete has a copy of the Government report to have a look at when he's got time. While it's not exactly the same issue as Phorm and Nebuad, it is almost the same equipment. There are a number of Australians that are not happy about this as you'd expect. It is another use of DPI and demonstrates the other possibilities. It would dovetail nicely into some of the anti-porn rhetoric of your government. There's a strong possibility that the management of the filtering could be outsourced to a commercial organisation already in situ in an ISP's network and switching. |
Re: Virgin Media Phorm Webwise Adverts [Updated: See Post No. 1, 77, 102 & 797]
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All the C4 programmes without adverts interrupting them. Bargain! Quote:
Although I would probably not even use a system like that either. |
Re: Virgin Media Phorm Webwise Adverts [Updated: See Post No. 1, 77, 102 & 797]
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So why have Privacy International got nothing at all to say about Phorm? Literally not one single word. Click here to search their web site. You can search news.google.com for Google and Privacy International. 61 results. But do the same for Phorm and Privacy International and you get zilch. So, PI simply stinks to me. :td: |
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