Re: ACTION-211 Draft text on how user agents must obtain consent to turn on a DNT signal

Peter, what are you trying to get at? I am missing it.

In the case of seeing DNT:1 from IE10, by far the most likely reason for
seeing that is that it's the default, and so in the absence of any other
information a server would be justified in thinking that it wasn't an
actual expression by the user but rather an expression by MSFT. You're
correct in that in the general case it's impossible to tell who tweaked the
setting (except perhaps in the case of SSL, where you know it was something
on the user's computer), but what are you trying to get at?

On Wed, Jun 13, 2012 at 7:46 AM, Peter Cranstone
<peter.cranstone@gmail.com>wrote:

> I know what the spec says.
>
> What I'm asking you to define is how the server knows WHO set the DNT
> flag. Nobody has been able to answer that question yet.
>
>
> Peter
> ___________________________________
> Peter J. Cranstone
> 720.663.1752
>
>
> From: Justin Brookman <justin@cdt.org>
> Date: Wednesday, June 13, 2012 8:41 AM
> To: W3 Tracking <public-tracking@w3.org>
> Subject: Re: ACTION-211 Draft text on how user agents must obtain consent
> to turn on a DNT signal
> Resent-From: W3 Tracking <public-tracking@w3.org>
> Resent-Date: Wed, 13 Jun 2012 14:41:56 +0000
>
>  On 6/13/2012 10:35 AM, Peter Cranstone wrote:
>
>  >> We do not specify how tracking preference choices are offered to the
> user or how the preference is enabled:
>
>  &
>
>  >> Implementations of HTTP that are not under control of the user *must
> not* express a tracking preference on their behalf.
>
>  Which means that MSIE 10 is compliant, because it's under the control of
> the user.
>
> This alone does not mean that IE10 is compliant, as there is separate text
> saying that "A user agent MUST NOT express a tracking preference for a
> user unless the user has interacted with the user agent in such a way as to
> indicate a tracking preference."
>
>
>  >> Implementations of HTTP that are not under control of the user *must
> not* express a tracking preference on their behalf.
>
>  How do you know? All a proxy server has to do is add DNT:1 – take Abine
> for example. A 3rd party plugin that adds DNT:1 to the outbound header. You
> have no idea who set it because there's no code to determine who did it. Me
> or the add on.
>
> I agree that third parties should not be second guessing DNT:1 signals for
> all the reasons that I and others have expressed over the list in the last
> two weeks.
>
>
> Peter
> ___________________________________
> Peter J. Cranstone
> 720.663.1752
>
>
>  From: Justin Brookman <justin@cdt.org>
> Date: Wednesday, June 13, 2012 8:26 AM
> To: W3 Tracking <public-tracking@w3.org>
> Subject: ACTION-211 Draft text on how user agents must obtain consent to
> turn on a DNT signal
> Resent-From: W3 Tracking <public-tracking@w3.org>
> Resent-Date: Wed, 13 Jun 2012 14:27:17 +0000
>
>   Hello, here is draft language for the compliance document on user agent
> requirements.  The first paragraph is new, the second two are
> copied-and-pasted from Section 3 of the current TPE spec.
>
> Replace 4.2 Intermediary Compliance (empty) with this new section:
>
> 4.2 User Agent Compliance
>
> A user agent MAY offer a control to express a tracking preference to third
> parties.  The control MUST communicate the user's preference in accordance
> with the [[Tracking Preference Expression (DNT)]] recommendation and
> otherwise comply with that recommendation.  A user agent MUST NOT express a
> tracking preference for a user unless the user has interacted with the user
> agent in such a way as to indicate a tracking preference.
>
> We do not specify how tracking preference choices are offered to the user
> or how the preference is enabled: each implementation is responsible for
> determining the user experience by which a tracking preference is enabled.
> For example, a user might select a check-box in their user agent's
> configuration, install an extension or add-on that is specifically designed
> to add a tracking preference expression, or make a choice for privacy that
> then implicitly includes a tracking preference (e.g., Privacy settings:
> high). Likewise, a user might install or configure a proxy to add the
> expression to their own outgoing requests.
>
> Although some controlled network environments, such as public access
> terminals or managed corporate intranets, might impose restrictions on the
> use or configuration of installed user agents, such that a user might only
> have access to user agents with a predetermined preference enabled, the
> user is at least able to choose whether to make use of those user agents.
> In contrast, if a user brings their own Web-enabled device to a library or
> cafe with wireless Internet access, the expectation will be that their
> chosen user agent and personal preferences regarding Web site behavior will
> not be altered by the network environment, aside from blanket limitations
> on what resources can or cannot be accessed through that network.
> Implementations of HTTP that are not under control of the user *must not*express a tracking preference on their behalf.
>
> --
> Justin Brookman
> Director, Consumer Privacy
> Center for Democracy & Technology
> 1634 I Street NW, Suite 1100
> Washington, DC 20006
> tel 202.407.8812
> fax 202.637.0969justin@cdt.orghttp://www.cdt.org
> @CenDemTech
> @JustinBrookman
>
>

Received on Wednesday, 13 June 2012 14:53:24 UTC