DocumentCode
2554799
Title
Third-Party Web Tracking: Policy and Technology
Author
Mayer, J.R. ; Mitchell, John C.
Author_Institution
Stanford Univ., Stanford, CA, USA
fYear
2012
fDate
20-23 May 2012
Firstpage
413
Lastpage
427
Abstract
In the early days of the web, content was designed and hosted by a single person, group, or organization. No longer. Webpages are increasingly composed of content from myriad unrelated "third-party" websites in the business of advertising, analytics, social networking, and more. Third-party services have tremendous value: they support free content and facilitate web innovation. But third-party services come at a privacy cost: researchers, civil society organizations, and policymakers have increasingly called attention to how third parties can track a user\´s browsing activities across websites. This paper surveys the current policy debate surrounding third-party web tracking and explains the relevant technology. It also presents the FourthParty web measurement platform and studies we have conducted with it. Our aim is to inform researchers with essential background and tools for contributing to public understanding and policy debates about web tracking.
Keywords
Web sites; data privacy; Web innovation; Web pages; advertising; analytics; fourth party Web measurement platform; privacy; social networking; third-party Web sites; third-party Web tracking; user browsing activity tracking; Advertising; Companies; Economics; History; Privacy; Security; Do Not Track; Web privacy; third-party tracking;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Security and Privacy (SP), 2012 IEEE Symposium on
Conference_Location
San Francisco, CA
ISSN
1081-6011
Print_ISBN
978-1-4673-1244-8
Electronic_ISBN
1081-6011
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/SP.2012.47
Filename
6234427
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