6 October 2013
Spying Ubiquity: Cellphone, Computer, Tablet
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/10/06/technology/selling-secrets-of-phone-users-
to-advertisers.html
Selling Secrets of Phone Users to Advertisers
By CLAIRE CAIN MILLER and SOMINI SENGUPTA
Published: October 5, 2013
SAN FRANCISCO Once, only hairdressers and bartenders knew peoples
secrets.
Now, smartphones know everything where people go, what they search
for, what they buy, what they do for fun and when they go to bed. That is
why advertisers, and tech companies like Google and Facebook, are finding
new, sophisticated ways to track people on their phones and reach them with
individualized, hypertargeted ads. And they are doing it without cookies,
those tiny bits of code that follow users around the Internet, because cookies
dont work on mobile devices.
Privacy advocates fear that consumers do not realize just how much of their
private information is on their phones and how much is made vulnerable simply
by downloading and using apps, searching the mobile Web or even just going
about daily life with a phone in your pocket. And this new focus on tracking
users through their devices and online habits comes against the backdrop
of a spirited public debate on privacy and government surveillance.
On Wednesday, the National Security Agency confirmed it had collected data
from cellphone towers in 2010 and 2011 to locate Americans cellphones,
though it said it never used the information.
People dont understand tracking, whether its on the browser
or mobile device, and dont have any visibility into the practices going
on, said Jennifer King, who studies privacy at the University of
California, Berkeley and has advised the Federal Trade Commission on mobile
tracking. Even as a tech professional, its often hard to disentangle
whats happening.
Drawbridge is one of several start-ups that have figured out how to follow
people without cookies, and to determine that a cellphone, work computer,
home computer and tablet belong to the same person, even if the devices are
in no way connected. Before, logging onto a new device presented advertisers
with a clean slate.
Were observing your behaviors and connecting your profile to
mobile devices, said Eric Rosenblum, chief operating officer at Drawbridge.
But dont call it tracking. Tracking is a dirty word, he
said.
Drawbridge, founded by a former Google data scientist, says it has matched
1.5 billion devices this way, allowing it to deliver mobile ads based on
Web sites the person has visited on a computer. If you research a Hawaiian
vacation on your work desktop, you could see a Hawaii ad that night on your
personal cellphone.
For advertisers, intimate knowledge of users has long been the promise of
mobile phones. But only now are numerous mobile advertising services that
most people have never heard of like Drawbridge, Flurry, Velti and
SessionM exploiting that knowledge, largely based on monitoring the
apps we use and the places we go. This makes it ever harder for mobile users
to escape the gaze of private companies, whether insurance firms or shoemakers.
Ultimately, the tech giants, whose principal business is selling advertising,
stand to gain. Advertisers using the new mobile tracking methods include
Ford Motor, American Express, Fidelity, Expedia, Quiznos and Groupon.
In the old days of ad targeting, we give them a list of sites and
wed say, Women 25 to 45, said David Katz, the former
general manager of mobile at Groupon and now at Fanatics, the sports merchandise
online retailer. In the new age, we basically say, Go get us
users.
In those old days just last year digital advertisers relied
mostly on cookies. But cookies do not attach to apps, which is why they do
not work well on mobile phones and tablets. Cookies generally do work on
mobile browsers, but do not follow people from a phone browser to a computer
browser. The iPhones mobile Safari browser blocks third-party cookies
altogether.
Even on PCs, cookies have lost much of their usefulness to advertisers, largely
because of cookie blockers.
Responding to this problem, the Interactive Advertising Bureau started a
group to explore the future of the cookie and alternatives, calling current
online advertising a lose-lose-lose situation for advertisers, consumers,
publishers and platforms. Most recently, Google began considering creating
an anonymous identifier tied to its Chrome browser that could help target
ads based on user Web browsing history.
For many advertisers, cookies are becoming irrelevant anyway because they
want to reach people on their mobile devices.
Yet advertising on phones has its limits.
For example, advertisers have so far had no way to know whether an ad seen
on a phone resulted in a visit to a Web site on a computer. They also have
been unable to connect user profiles across devices or even on the same device,
as users jump from the mobile Web to apps.
Without sophisticated tracking, running mobile advertising is like
throwing money out the window. Its worse than buying TV
advertisements, said Ravi Kamran, founder and chief executive of Trademob,
a mobile app marketing and tracking service.
This is why a service that connects multiple devices with one user is so
compelling to marketers.
Drawbridge, which was founded by Kamakshi Sivaramakrishnan, formerly at AdMob,
the Google mobile ad network, has partnerships with various online publishers
and ad exchanges. These send partners a notification every time a user visits
a Web site or mobile app, which is considered an opportunity to show an ad.
Drawbridge watches the notifications for behavioral patterns and uses statistical
modeling to determine the probability that several devices have the same
owner and to assign that person an anonymous identifier.
So if someone regularly checks a news app on a phone in bed each morning,
browses the same news site from a laptop in the kitchen, visits from that
laptop at an office an hour later and returns that night on a tablet in the
same home, Drawbridge concludes that those devices belong to the same person.
And if that person shopped for airplane tickets at work, Drawbridge could
show that person an airline ad on the tablet that evening.
Ms. Sivaramakrishnan said its pinpointing was so accurate that it could show
spouses different, personalized ads on a tablet they share. Before, she said,
ad targeting was about devices, not users, but its more important
to understand who the user is.
Similarly, if you use apps for Google Chrome, Facebook or Amazon on your
cellphone, those companies can track what you search for, buy or post across
your devices when you are logged in.
Other companies, like Flurry, get to know people by the apps they use.
Flurry embeds its software in 350,000 apps on 1.2 billion devices to help
app developers track things like usage. Its tracking software appears on
the phone automatically when people download those apps. Flurry recently
introduced a real-time ad marketplace to send advertisers an anonymized profile
of users the moment they open an app.
Profiles are as detailed as wealthy bookworms who own small businesses or
new mothers who travel for business and like to garden. The company has even
more specific data about users that it does not yet use because of privacy
concerns, said Rahul Bafna, senior director of Flurry.
Wireless carriers know even more about us from our home ZIP codes, like how
much time we spend on mobile apps and which sites we visit on mobile browsers.
Verizon announced in December that its customers could authorize it to share
that information with advertisers in exchange for coupons. AT&T announced
this summer that it would start selling aggregated customer data to marketers,
while offering a way to opt out.
Neither state nor federal law prohibits the collection or sharing of data
by third parties. In California, app developers are required to post a privacy
policy and to clearly state what personal information they collect and how
they share it. Still, that leaves much mystery for ordinary mobile users.
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