Thursday, June 14, 2012

How Microsoft and Yahoo are selling your data to politicians...

Microsoft and Yahoo are selling political campaigns the ability to target voters online with tailored ads using names, Zip codes and other registration information that users provide when they sign up for free email and other services.

The Web giants provide users no notification that their information is being used for political targeting.

In one sense, campaigns are doing a more sophisticated version of what they've always done through the post office — sending political fliers to selected households. But the Internet allows for more subtle targeting. It relies not on email but on advertisements that surfers may not realize have been customized for them.

Campaigns use voters records to assemble lists of people they're trying to reach — for instance, "registered Republicans that have made a donation," Yahoo's director of sales Andy Cotten told ProPublica. Microsoft and Yahoo help campaigns find these people online and then send them tailored ads. Full story...

Related posts:
  1. Gary Kovacs: Stalking the stalkers on the internet...
  2. How Google and Facebook manipulate and determine your searches...
  3. What if someone could see everything you've ever Googled...
  4. Privacy matters even if you have " nothing to hide"
  5. The real price of "free" online services...
  6. What if democracy is just an illusion? (What are Super PACs?)
  7. Record number of Americans scorn both Democrats and Republicans...

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