Ad-tech nightmare? Is RTB-based user tracking about to be found illegal by Belgian EU privacy enforcers?

Privacy Beat

Your weekly privacy news update.

VIEW IN YOUR BROWSER


Ad-tech nightmare: Are Belgian EU enforcers about to find Real Time Bidding can’t meet GDPR privacy rules?

Problems with data privacy may be about to dramatically shift the way programmatic advertising can operate on the web — at least in the European Union and perhaps globally as a result.  For more than two years, privacy activists, including Irish activist Johnny Ryan, have been hounding the Belgian data-protection authorities to declare “real time bidding” (RTB) in violation of the EU’s General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR).  

Now they may be about to do so. The Interactive Advertising Bureau’s European unit released a statement on Nov. 5 saying it expected an adverse ruling from the Belgian authorities. This prompted Johnny Ryan to react.  And the whole long-running tussle was thoroughly explained with thoughtful content and a bit of analysis by TechCrunch’s Natasha Lomas.  The links are below. 

EU & UK PRIVACY 

SECTION 230

WASHINGTON WATCH 

Does your organization need customized privacy compliance solutions? ITEGA  can help.

We bring together support you need to approach compliance with CCPA, GDPR if needed, and future privacy legislation as it emerges.

Learn More


FTC chair Lena Khan
 

FTC AND PRIVACY 

STATEHOUSE BEAT 

PERSONAL PRIVACY 


A 2020 New America report reviewed

DATA PRIVACY AND FAKE NEWS 

PLATFORM PRIVACY

AD TECH 

PRIVACY BUSINESS

Like what you see? Then recommend to a friend.

Subscribe to Privacy Beat

PUBLISHING PRIVACY & POLICY

CHINA PRIVACY LAW ANALYSIS

WORLD PRIVACY 

 

UPCOMING EVENTS

QUOTE OF THE WEEK

Consumer confidence in data privacy falls but trusted brands benefit, market researchers find in 2021 survey 

  • A new survey of 5,000 respondents from Brazil, Germany, the UK the U.S. and China has some in depth results on consumer attitudes toward online privacy.  The research is a followup on a 10,000-respondent study in 2019 and the 2021 update was conducted by New York-based consumer research firm Buzzback and funded by location data platform HERE Technologies and ESOMAR, a membership organization for market, social, and opinion researchers that was founded in 1947. The name ESOMAR is an abbreviation of their original name, the European Society for Opinion and Marketing Research. Buzzback’s slide deck with details of the 2021 update is HERE.  An 2018 study is HERE and a report on the 2019 survey is HERE.   Below is an excerpt of the companies’ October 2021 news release. 

“The new study shows that the level of concern about sharing personal information digitally has risen; from 55% two years ago to 60% now. People now think harder about who to share their data with. In 2019, 54% didn’t consider who they were giving their information to, in 2021 that figure is 48%.

“With confidence in privacy reducing, the positive impact of brand trust is increasing. Willingness to buy from trusted brands is on the rise. Eighty-seven percent said they are more willing to buy from companies that handled personal data as they should. Big brands such as Apple, Google, Amazon and Microsoft are at the top for consumer trust, while the research shows that social media giants are still not building trust. In spite of this, people will still continue to use services such as social media even if they don’t fully trust them.

“People are now less aware of what happens to their personal data – particularly in the US, where we see a 15% drop in certainty of what happens with personal information (from 40% in 2019 to 25 % this year). This lack of trust or understanding leads to people not wanting to divulge their information, even when there is a potential reward. Only 30% are now willing to trade losing their privacy for possible benefits, down from 35%. 

“Although the level of scepticism is higher, people are however willing to put their concern aside for the greater good. For example, to help stop the spread of the pandemic, 51% of respondents would still permit the recording of their health data to improve the general well-being or saving lives. And 30% would be happy to share their location or personal data if there’s value in doing this.”

ABOUT PRIVACY BEAT

Privacy Beat is a weekly email update from the Information Trust Exchange Governing Association in service to its mission. Links and brief reports are compiled, summarized or analyzed by Bill Densmore and Eva Tucker.  Submit links and ideas for coverage to newsletter@itega.org

Share Share

Tweet Tweet

Share Share

Forward Forward

Facebook

Twitter

Website

Copyright © 2021 Information Trust Exchange Governing Association, All rights reserved.

Want to change how you receive these emails?
You can update your preferences or unsubscribe from this list.

Email Marketing Powered by Mailchimp