Google-DoubleClick Merger Concerns

Google’s acquisition of DoubleClick raises many major privacy concerns. Throughout the late 90’s DoubleClick was the boogyman of the privacy community. More recently Google has taken on that mantle. The combination creates an information harvesting juggernaut.

Google is in a position to see the search terms, and thus focus of interest, of the vast majority of Internet users. Most users start most searches or web expeditions with a Google search. Their logs contain a fairly complete history of the interests of their users going back for years.

DoubleClick has a view of user activity after the search across thousands of websites. Banner and other website ads are not actually hosted on the websites on which they appear. DoubleClick serves the content from their servers, and handles any clicks on the ads. Importantly, DoubleClick can gather your information even if you don’t click on the link. Simply viewing the ad is enough for them to cookie you, to gather your IP address, and store that along with the URL you are viewing.

Combined, this enables the creation of a database most searches along with most subsequent web surfing activities. Nearly ubiquitous Internet monitoring by a single entity will be a reality after this merger. Having both the search information and the surfing activity give the answer to both the what and why of a users actions. The merged data is much more powerful than the individual components, and serve to fill in the gaps in each other’s coverage.

Ironically, even Microsoft is talking about the privacy risks of this merger. Redmond | News: Microsoft Warns of Google-DoubleClick Danger

The Electronic Privacy Information Center (EPIC) has gone so far as to file a complaint with the FCC.

- Lance Cottrell

This entry was posted on Friday, April 20th, 2007 at 12:02 pm and is filed under Internet, Online Privacy, Surveillance. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

2 Responses to “Google-DoubleClick Merger Concerns”

  1. John Says:

    In response to the section about online ads that can collect information about a visitor without the visitor even knowing it, I have been using christonium.com for the last few months and they have some pretty interesting privacy policies. The do not collect any personal info, including email addresses. And they have an option to turn off any online ads.

    Just wanted to let people know that there are some different methods out there.

  2. lance Says:

    They look unusually forthright about their policies and actions. Here is their privacy policy statement on advertising:

    Advertising

    Because many websites use ads, consumers should be made aware that if an advertisement is being viewed online, whether ads on christonium.com or elsewhere, then their personal information may be at risk. Marketers utilize information gathered through persistent cookies to track purchase histories, location and online behavior. Whether it is your computer type, browsing history or IP address, these data are all potentially exposed through online advertising.
    We believe that an account holder on christonium.com should be able to choose what they are exposed to, whether it is the ads themselves or the knowledge that even though christonium.com does not utilize persistent cookies to track their movement, or collect potentially personal information, any advertising we place in the browser, from a third party may expose you to methods and data collection christonium.com does not subscribe to.

Leave a Reply