Cutts Reports Conflict Of Interest In Privacy/Advertising Study

In: web resources

2 Oct 2009

Often, the source of a statement means everything.  It might, for example, be more newsworthy if Gordon Brown labeled Americans "silly" than if (or when) Mahmoud Ahmadinejad called us all evil pigs.  And Matt Cutts would just like everyone to know that one source of a study on advertising isn’t exactly Google’s best friend.

This morning, a lot of headlines declared that at least two-thirds of Americans don’t want to be tracked by advertisers online, even for the sake of more relevant ads or discounts.  The articles got their figures from a new study. 

Matt Cutts

But Cutts wrote on his blog, "One of the study’s co-authors was Chris Jay Hoofnagle.  Hoofnagle has served as the Senior Counsel and Director of the West Coast Office of Electronic Privacy Information Center (EPIC).  You haven’t heard of EPIC?  EPIC was the group that in 2004 argued that Gmail should be shut down: ‘In a letter sent to California Attorney General Bill Lockyer on Monday, the Electronic Privacy Information Center argued that Gmail must be shut down because it ‘represents an unprecedented invasion into the sanctity of private communications.’"

Cutts then added, "I can guess what you’re saying.  ‘That was five years ago.  People didn’t know then how useful Gmail was going to be.’  Okay, then did you know that EPIC lobbied the government to shut down Google Apps earlier this year?"

In light of this information, the fresh study doesn’t look quite so ominous for Google and the online advertising industry.


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2 Responses to Cutts Reports Conflict Of Interest In Privacy/Advertising Study

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tomhuber2003

January 29th, 2010 at 2:09 pm

$99 one-way ticket, you can get $158 round trip sometimes

You can spend $500 for one week visit California ( including air ticket and $20 per night hostel, food and some admission)

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Mathcaptor Crescendo

January 31st, 2010 at 2:16 pm

I suggest you cite your sources as a foot note. If you are unsure of what a foot-note is, it is a type of citation that is used. An site that uses a foot-note would be Wikipedia.

As you can see, there is a number after a certain sentence that looks like this [1]. That is an indication that that sentence is cited and if you click on the [1] it will take you to the end of the page where the sources are. If you'd like to do this type of citation, just notify me and I'll tell you more details. If you can't, then this site would help you with footnotes.

http://www.oberlin.edu/faculty/svolk/citation.htm

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