Google doesn't want you to limit its ability to follow you around the internet | Dan Gillmor

Dan Gillmor | The Guardian 2014-07-26

Summary:

Behind our screens, tech companies are racing to extract a price for what we read and watch on the web: our personal information

Every now and then, when I try to read an online article, I see nothing but a blank space where the article should appear. Because I run software to block third-party tracking cookies, the publication blocks my access to the article. When I give such sites and there are a number of them full permissions on my browser, the articles become visible.

My inability to read one article isn't just annoying it's part of a global effort to end internet users' "free lunch" of content. Behind our screens, there is a technological race to extract a price for what we read and watch on the web: our personal information and browsing habits. And as Silicon Valley and the advertising industry continue to merge, the incentives to collect and use that information will only grow.

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Link:

http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2014/jul/26/google-ability-follow-users-internet-advertisements

Updated:

07/26/2014, 07:00

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Berkman Center Community - Test » Dan Gillmor | The Guardian
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Tags:

Authors:

Dan Gillmor

Date tagged:

07/26/2014, 10:20

Date published:

07/26/2014, 10:20