This article discusses the proposal under the EC (European ePrivacy) on the new rules on the tracking of users. The right to privacy and control of data for European citizens will be enforced under these new legislations. Messaging, email and voice services such as those provided by Facebook, Google and Microsoft will be forced to guarantee the confidentiality of conversations and metadata. Listening to, tapping, intercepting, scanning or the storing of communications will not be allowed without the consent of the user, unless it is critical for billing or other purposes. In terms of cookies, which currently require consent for all purposes will be simplified as some aspects of websites will no longer need them. However, these changes may be a disadvantage towards online advertisers who have warned that overly strict rules would undermine the ability of many websites to fund themselves and offer free services.
- Online advertising generates £10bn ($12bn) of revenue for publishers and content creators in the UK alone, according to the IAB.
I believe that these tighter rules on the privacy of users is a positive, as users have become victims of datamining without their consent. However, this will have an impact on websites which do depend on datamining as ad revenue this the only revenue they may recieve
- The Sun said it had made £16m in profit last year, almost half the £29m in 2015.
- Total revenues fell from £456m to £446m as a steep decline in print advertising failed to be offset by income from other areas, including the now free-access Sun website. The Sun scrapped its paywall in November 2015 after two years
No comments:
Post a Comment