In a recent blog which should meet with the full agreement of most art directors and account managers in online advertising agencies, a London-based solicitor has made a compelling argument against over-regulative legislation which may needlessly constrict the business of targeted advertising (or OBA, online behavioral advertising).
Unless people want to start paying for the web content they currently enjoy free of charge courtesy of advertising revenue, they may need to become rather more skeptical about big government attempts to impede (or “regulate”) behavioral advertising online. The scare quotes are deliberate – the meaning of the term “regulate” is to ensure that business is regular, not legislatively obstructed.
Confusing regulation with obstruction
As Joanne Frears (a solicitor with the commercial law firm Jeffrey Greene Russell Limited) points out, European Union legislation last year imposed a ‘voluntary’ code to ensure that consumers are routinely told how to opt out of OBA tracking and are also invited to give clear consent before permitting cookies to track their web activities. Advertisers are not permitted under the code to target OBA to anyone under the age of twelve years.
Last year, attempting to support the resistance data collection, Microsoft announced a planned default “Do Not Track” signal in IE10 – and was rapidly forced to calm fears that its proposal would damage the online advertising business. Throwing productive art directors and revenue-building account managers onto welfare isn’t a good move in tough economic times.
Consumer choice?
But isn’t giving consumers a choice always a good thing? Frears offers a more nuanced perspective, quoting the late and much-mourned Steve Jobs: “A lot of times, people don’t know what they want until you show it to them. Regulations like the EU voluntary code and fads like the Do Not Track initiative invariably fall down at this point.
As Frears puts it:
“They stifle development and promote the status quo in an environment that was never meant to be static. Research done last year by the IAB and ValueClick shows that at least 55% of us would rather have online advertising targeted to us because we prefer not to wade through non-specific advertising. Do regulators really take us for online innocents, incapable of making a judgment call about whether or not to click through an ad we can tell has been targeted to us?”