IPcentral Weblog
  The DACA Blog
  Institutions
     
  Tanks
     
  Blogs
     
  Mags
     

Sunday, November 15, 2009

 
Privacy Hearing & Briefings This Week: More Non-sense about Non-harms of Online Advertising
(previous | next)
 

This will be a busy week for those who follow privacy policy in Washington:


  1. Monday (11/16), 11 am: the coalition of 10 so-called "privacy advocacy" groups that recently demanded sweeping regulation of online data collection and use will be holding a briefing for congressional staffers on their demands in 2322 Rayburn House Office Building.

  2. Wednesday (11/17), 4 pm: A "bipartisan briefing for staff of Members on the Subcommittees" in 2322 Rayburn, followed by a Democratic staff briefing.

  3. Thursday (11/18), 10 am: The House Energy & Commerce Committee's Subcommittee on Communications, Technology & the Internet and Subcommittee on Commerce, Trade & Consumer Protection will hold a joint hearing on "Exploring the Offline and Online Collection and Use of Consumer Information" in 2123 Rayburn.


The witness list for Thursday's hearing has not yet been released, but reportedly includes Pam Dixon of the World Privacy Forum and Prof. Chris Hoofnagle of Berkeley Law, as well as three industry representatives (but no skeptics of regulation from outside of industry, who might ask "whether privacy advocates" really have consumers interests at heart). Dixon and Hoofnagle may well be the only two people on the planet who could rival Jeff Chester in their paranoia about online advertising.

Jell-oSo I suspect the hearing will consist largely of the two of them trying to dodge the question Adam Thierer and I keep asking: What's the harm that requires government regulation? For them--and for David Vladeck--the new head of the FTC's Bureau of Consumer Protection--the answer seems to be that no real harm need be established to justify regulation, whatever the cost to consumers of regulation, because "harm" may be defined by anecdote and in terms of "dignity interests"--a legal standard that has all the intellectual and factual rigor of a plate full of Jell-O shots (intoxicating and fun for parties but squishy with little real substance).

Adam and I will be raising this and other questions at the FTC's Exploring Privacy workshop on December 7. I will be participating in the online behavioral advertising panel, and PFF President Adam Thierer will be participating in the consumer expectations/surveys panel. Check out my comments to the FTC for more on our perspective.

posted by Berin Szoka @ 10:43 PM | Advertising & Marketing , Privacy

Share |

Link to this Entry | Printer-Friendly | Email a Comment | Post a Comment(1)

Comments

"a legal standard that has all the intellectual and factual rigor of a plate full of Jell-O shots (intoxicating and fun for parties but squishy with little real substance)."

Best analogy I've heard in a long time.

Posted by: Todd at November 16, 2009 11:13 AM

Post a Comment:





 
Blog Main
RSS Feed  
Recent Posts
  Great PBS News Hour Debate @ Impact of the Net & Technology
Free Press Calls on Feds to Halt TV Innovation
Excited to Be Heading to CES This Week!
Radio Innovation & Audio Competition in the 2000s
How Did We Live Without These Technologies 10 Years Ago!
Are Consumers Mindless Sheep?
William Patry's "Moral Panic" about MPAA, Dan Glickman and ACTA
What an Amazing Decade (of Technological Progress)!
2010: The Year of "Everything Neutrality"
U.S. Legislators CANNOT Trust Claims that 37% of the DMCA Takedown Notices That Google Receives Fail to State "Valid Copyright Claims."
Archives by Month
  January 2010
December 2009
November 2009
October 2009
  - (see all)
Archives by Topic
  - A La Carte
- Add category
- Advertising & Marketing
- Antitrust & Competition Policy
- Appleplectics
- Books & Book Reviews
- Broadband
- Cable
- Campaign Finance Law
- Capitalism
- Capitol Hill
- China
- Commons
- Communications
- Copyright
- Cutting the Video Cord
- Cyber-Security
- DACA
- Digital Americas
- Digital Europe
- Digital Europe 2006
- Digital TV
- E-commerce
- e-Government & Transparency
- Economics
- Education
- Electricity
- Energy
- Events
- Exaflood
- Free Speech
- Gambling
- General
- Generic Rant
- Global Innovation
- Googlephobia
- Googlephobia
- Human Capital
- Innovation
- Internet
- Internet Governance
- Internet TV
- Interoperability
- IP
- Local Franchising
- Mass Media
- Media Regulation
- Monetary Policy
- Municipal Ownership
- Net Neutrality
- Neutrality
- Ongoing Series
- Online Safety & Parental Controls
- Open Source
- Philosophy / Cyber-Libertarianism
- Podcasts
- Privacy
- Privacy Solutions
- Regulation
- Search
- Security
- Software
- Space
- Spectrum
- Sports
- State Policy
- Supreme Court
- Taxes
- The FCC
- The FTC
- The News Frontier
- Think Tanks
- Trade
- Trademark
- Universal Service
- VoIP
- What We're Reading
- Wireless
- Wireline
Archives by Author
PFF Blogosphere Archives
We welcome comments by email - look for a link to the author's email address in the byline of each post. Please let us know if we may publish your remarks.
 










The Progress & Freedom Foundation