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FTC Staff Revises Online Behavioral Advertising Principles

News release: “Federal Trade Commission staff…issued a report describing its ongoing examination of online behavioral advertising and setting forth revisions to proposed principles to govern self-regulatory efforts in this area. The key issue concerns how online advertisers can best protect consumers’ privacy while collecting information about their online activities…The report discusses the potential benefits of behavioral advertising to consumers, including the free online content that advertising generally supports and personalization that many consumers appear to value. It also discusses the privacy concerns that the practice raises, including the invisibility of the data collection to consumers and the risk that the information collected – including sensitive information regarding health, finances, or children – could fall into the wrong hands or be used for unanticipated purposes. Consistent with the FTC’s overall approach to consumer privacy, the report seeks to balance the potential benefits of behavioral advertising against the privacy concerns it raises, and to encourage privacy protections while maintaining a competitive marketplace.”

  • Federal Trade Commission Staff Report – Self-Regulatory Principles For Online Behavioral Advertising: Tracking, Targeting, and Technology (February 2009)
  • Related: “CDT sees the release of the guidelines, which set a higher standard than existing industry principles, as a signal that companies are running out of time to step up their self-regulatory efforts. Although the FTC report raises the bar for self-regulation, the guidelines don’t address all of CDT’s concerns with online advertising and privacy. CDT looks forward to working with the agency and Congress on legislation that could address online behavioral advertising and general consumer privacy.”
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