RE: ISSUE-5: What is the definition of tracking?

How many consumers will really visit the page explaining it?  About the same number that read through the EULA click-wraps.

In today's world of intuitive design a consumer needing to turn to documentation is a failure.  Why not simply set the proper expectation up front?  We can still have the page... it will be just that much less necessary.  I can't see the downside of using an name tuned to the function.  On the upside we at least save consumers some time and frustration.

At the outside perhaps we even cure cancer with all the extra computing cycles Folding@home can take advantage of instead of consumers using them trying to figure out what "Do Not Track" REALLY means. :)


From: Jonathan Mayer [mailto:jmayer@stanford.edu]
Sent: Thursday, October 13, 2011 2:32 PM
To: Brett Error
Cc: Roy T. Fielding; Tracking Protection Working Group WG
Subject: Re: ISSUE-5: What is the definition of tracking?

I completely share Aleecia's view that the scope of Do Not Track need not match how "tracking" is defined in a dictionary.  We're setting a technical standard here - it will be very open and explicit about what's covered and what's not.  Our standard will be guided largely by user expectations, but also by tech, business, law, policy, and politics constraints.  To the extent we deviate from user expectations, the onus is on us to explain why and how.  But in my view that's a question of follow-on education and discussion, not how we write the standard itself.  For example, I think we would be wise to produce a page explaining in plain terms what's covered and what isn't that all browsers can link to from their privacy settings.  I'm not at all concerned about some sort of media backlash about our definition.  From the outset almost every stakeholder has been clear that Do Not Track is about third-party tracking.  And just about all the press coverage has been about third-party tracking.  I'm particularly surprised to hear these hypocritical arguments coming from IAB and others in the self-regulatory space, since the opt outs y'all currently offer are orders of magnitude more misleading than a transparent Do Not Track standard will ever be.

As for changing the name from Do Not Track, I would strongly oppose the move.  First, it's the name the world knows this proposal by.  (See, e.g., http://www.google.com/trends?q=do+not+track.)  Attempting a retitle to "Tracking Preference Expression" caused lots of unnecessary confusion among stakeholders.  Second, Do Not Track has real messaging force.  It's no real secret that there are differing degrees of influence around the table.  For some, myself included, the name has been instrumental in making progress on third-party web tracking.

Jonathan

On Oct 13, 2011, at 1:16 PM, Brett Error wrote:


slow clap<< :)

-----Original Message-----
From: public-tracking-request@w3.org<mailto:public-tracking-request@w3.org> [mailto:public-tracking-request@w3.org] On Behalf Of Roy T. Fielding
Sent: Thursday, October 13, 2011 1:52 PM
To: Brett Error
Cc: Tracking Protection Working Group WG
Subject: Re: ISSUE-5: What is the definition of tracking?

The essential problem with relying on a set of exceptions is that the end user cannot be expected to know those exceptions.  All they know is the configuration that is set.
If we give the user an expectation of requesting "Do Not Track"
and then allow sites to ignore that request on the basis of our set of exceptions, then I think regulators will treat this protocol in the same way that they treat fine print in contracts.

In other words, we are setting up the situation where the mechanism will be implemented according to our standard but the regulations will be implemented according to the user's expectations -- nullifying our standard in the process.

Users don't see header fields, so there is no need to change the DNT field name.  However, my current plan is to stop referring to it as "Do Not Track" in the document.

....Roy

On Oct 12, 2011, at 6:02 PM, Brett Error wrote:


Any time you are recording the behavior/path of something, you are tracking it.  There isn't anything we can do to redefine that in a consumer's lexicon, nor do I think we really want to.

The urge to define "tracking" stems from the concern that  "do not track" sounds like it will forbid all tracking.  That, of course, also is not our intention so we feel compelled to redefine the word "track" to curtail its scope (in more of a legal document type of context).

That would be one approach.  We can take (and indeed already are taking) a different approach.

PROPOSAL: Close ISSUE-5 with the following notes:

1) The DNT specification covers a standard way wherein a consumer can express a tracking preference.  It is entirely up to the site/service whether or not to respect that preference.

2) It is entirely possible for a site/service to be in full compliance with the DNT specification, and still track a consumer, EVEN WHEN THAT CONSUMER IS EXPRESSING A PREFERENCE AGAINST BEING TRACKED.  An example of this is the first party exemption around which we've reached a (conceptual) consensus.  There are others being discussed.

The notion here is that in certain situations, there may be reasons a party may have a right/need to do tracking.  It is our responsibility to define 1) what those situations are, 2) how, even in these situations, we do our best to protect the spirit of what the consumer is requesting (privacy), and 3) how, if at all, the service doing the tracking responds in this type of situation so that the consumer's agent can take action (if any).

In doing so, we actually define "track" in the context of DNT, but avoid the messy aspects of a semantics battle.


-----Original Message-----
From: public-tracking-request@w3.org<mailto:public-tracking-request@w3.org>
[mailto:public-tracking-request@w3.org] On Behalf Of Bjoern Hoehrmann
Sent: Wednesday, October 12, 2011 6:17 PM
To: Aleecia M. McDonald
Cc: public-tracking@w3.org<mailto:public-tracking@w3.org>
Subject: Re: ISSUE-5: What is the definition of tracking?

* Aleecia M. McDonald wrote:
I am not convinced either Roy or I have the first case quite solid
yet, perhaps because we have each phrased this as more absolute than
what people think. It would be very good if people who think there is
more to tracking than just data moving between sites could please
chime in with a lucid explanation of what they mean.

The Working Group cannot define "tracking" without additional modifiers in a manner that is inconsistent with typical english usage. "This user arrived on this page and then moved on to that page" is a statement that cannot be made if the user's movements around the site are not tracked.
--
Björn Höhrmann · mailto:bjoern@hoehrmann.de ·
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Received on Thursday, 13 October 2011 20:49:13 UTC