Do Not Track: Technology, Policy, and Politics
- Jonathan Mayer | Stanford University
Web tracking is pervasive: the average popular website incorporates over fifty third-party tracking mechanisms. And web tracking is unpopular: a majority of Americans oppose the practice. Do Not Track is a technology and policy response that would provide users with a simple, universal web tracking opt out. Both the Federal Trade Commission and the Department of Commerce have signaled support. This talk explores central questions in the ongoing web privacy debate:
- What information do third parties collect about users?
- What technologies do third parties use to track users?
- What limits does the online advertising industry’s self-regulation impose?
- What should Do Not Track prohibit?
- Who should enforce it, and how?
- What would the economic impact be?
- Could it actually happen?
To learn more, visit http://donottrack.us and follow @donottrack.
Speaker Details
Jonathan Mayer is a computer science Ph.D. student and 3L at Stanford University. He graduated from Princeton University in 2009 with a concentration in the Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs. Jonathan’s area of study encompasses the intersections of policy, law, and computer science – with particular emphasis on national security and international relations. A proud Chicago native, he is undaunted by freezing weather and enjoys celery salt on a hot dog.
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