Senate hearing on NebuAd, privacy set for tomorrow
On the eve of a Senate Commerce, Science and Transportation Committee hearing on the privacy issues raised by online advertising, yet another cable company has pulled back from using NebuAd to track its customers. Wide Open West, a Denver-based cable provider that's been using the NebuAd since March, is ending its test of the controversial software.
Tomorrow's hearing on the Hill will give critics, who say the software and others like it violate wiretap laws because it allows carriers to track customers' communications, an opportunity to publicly air their grievances.
Cable companies and telcos say they need software like NebuAd-and it's British comrade-in-arms, Phorm-to help them develop targeted advertising for subgroups of Internet and television service users. The ad dollars, they say, are critical to their growth. Check out this Wall Street Journal story for a different look at the controversy.
Related articles:
CenturyTel holds NebuAd--for now CenturyTel report
Are Embarq and CenturyTel moving ahead with NebuAd? NebuAd report
Charter drops plan to track web usage Charter web tracking story
Congressmen ask Charter to delay snooping plan Charter report
Comments
This really marks a "resistance" level to quote a stock trading term. Targeted ads are already pretty intrusive. An opt-in system is the only logical model. I remember hearing once that the value in a network is always at the end points and thus why the carriers will never earn outstanding returns.
I wrote more on this subject at my blog enterprisenext.wordpress.com.

