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Web Tracking Protection: An Emerging Internet Standard that Helps Protect Consumers from Tracking

Today, the W3C has accepted and published Microsoft’s member submission for an Internet standard to help protect consumer privacy. This announcement from the Web standards body responsible for HTML5 is an important step forward for people and businesses that interact online.

The privacy concerns from consumers and academics and governments world-wide have both technical and non-technical aspects. Addressing these concerns will involve technology. The W3C’s involvement provides the best forum possible for that technology discussion. Just as the community has worked together at the W3C on interoperable HTML5, we can now work together on an interoperable (or universal, to use the FTC privacy report’s term) way to help protect consumers’ privacy.

Addressing these privacy concerns will also involve much more than technology. Governments and regulators and law enforcement have a crucial role to plan in addressing the public’s privacy concerns. There’s a large and growing body of work that shows the complexities of the non-technical issues they face. Some examples are the privacy report from the US Federal Trade Commission in December 2010, the work of the EU’s Article 29 working group and EU ePrivacy directives, and public discussions like the recent one at the UC Berkeley

The technology solutions we work on as an industry need to work well with the social, economic, and political discussions that occur world-wide outside the W3C. The FTC’s report, for example, provided a context that made our announcement of IE9’s Tracking Protection functionality much easier for many to understand. That report also notes the following issues and questions about technical solutions:

  • A universal mechanism should not undermine the benefits of online behavioral advertising, including funding free online content and providing personalized advertisements that many consumers want.
  • A universal mechanism should be different from the Do Not Call program (which has a registry of consumer phone numbers) in one key regard:   it should not require a registry of unique identifiers as that could negatively impact privacy.  Instead, the FTC recommended a browser-based mechanism.
  • Should a universal choice mechanism go beyond a total opt-out and include an option that lets consumers make granular choices about the types of data they are willing to have collected from them and the type of advertising they wish to receive?
  • Universal choice mechanisms should be understandable, simple, easy to find and very clear about what the choices mean.
  • There are a number of questions about the mechanics of a universal mechanism, including how it should be publicized, how it can be as clear as possible, how many consumers are likely to choose to opt out of targeted advertising, what will happen if many opt out and whether legislation should be passed if the private sector does not implement a universal mechanism voluntarily.

Through this lens, the W3C’s Web Tracking Protection, based on the IE9 Tracking Protection functionality, is a strong step forward.

The proposal with the W3C is a significant step toward enabling an industry standard way for Web sites to (1) detect when consumers express their intent not to be tracked, and (2) help protect themselves from sites that do not respect that intent. Enabling consumers merely to express their intent to not be tracked is just not sufficient. It’s a subset of what effective tracking protection should do. IE9’s Tracking Protection also enables consumers to block the content that does the tracking. You can see some initial examples of Tracking Protection lists here. This diagram illustrates how a browser that supports Web Tracking Protection works with lists:

We look forward to working with the community through the W3C on a common standard for Internet Privacy. It will help consumers who use browsers that support it.

—Dean Hachamovitch, Corporate Vice President, Internet Explorer

Updated 2/24: added link to announcement of IE9's Tracking Protection

Comments

  • Anonymous
    February 24, 2011
    Does this mean IE9 is more standards compliant than Mozilla Firefox for web tracking then? I appreciate that's unfair comment (as it is so new), but it is also amusing.

  • Anonymous
    February 24, 2011
    Safari is more customizable than IE9! Look, lots of great work on Trident and that's appreciated though at the end of the day I'm still moving clients to different browsers because I can customize them to be easy to use. Friendly icon with text labels? You bet! Tech savvy people like those? Probably not but they aren't my paying clients. Firefox toolbar: Back, Forward, Reload, Stop, Home | Bookmarks, Downloads, History, New Tab, Print My clients don't ask me repetitive questions that other people with clients do because I understand their needs, make their computers easy to use and show them how to use them with the easy-to-see buttons. Result? Happy clients and happy clients trust me word and only spend their money if I say a product will help them. What I say matters to my clients, what I say doesn't matter to Microsoft. Is that a savvy business decision? Should we presume that 99% of the devs on the IE team did NOT totally dislike the merged tabs toolbar move or do the devs only have three tabs open at max? Vista destroyed the GUI and 7 compounded it...big massive bulky start menus? A search feature for the programs folder? REALLY? I click twice (start->program) in XP, how many times do you have to click in your start menu for notepad in example? Who's in charge of the IE and Windows departments? If you spend time investing in features like protection from tracking why make the GUI so bad that people like me will move clients away from your software? Firefox 4, Chrome 9, likely Safari 6 and likely Opera 12 will have GPU acceleration on XP and none of those companies have near the size of the financial war-chest to invest in to their browsers. I'll obviously get criticisms from people who don't matter. Who matters? Paying clients, people who use their computers for their businesses or to keep in touch with family, no one calls me if they consider their computer a hobby. Making money by resolving the same problems for clients deceitful, my clients return because their needs increase as their ability to use the computer has been increased by me making their computers easy to use. I teach my tech friends how to make their clients computers more usable and they make more money by helping people instead of making blind guesses. This stuff compounds, imagine the thousands of licenses not sold that could have. Now imagine fixing the GUI and making the software easy to use...maybe even desirable to use. Do that and I'll move clients to your software, continue doing the opposite and I'll continue moving my clients away from your software, all of it because most of us who like using computers have noted the damage done to IE, Office, Windows and other Microsoft products. At the end of the day clients as in people matter and Microsoft needs to pull a 180 in the GUI department or you can expect more things like XP's market share to always be greater than 7 well in to 8's RTM.

  • Anonymous
    February 24, 2011
    @JAB Creations : There is no content HA on XP. Period. The only HA on XP is the compositing one using Direct3D. A hardware-accelerated browser on Win7 will do much, much better than a "hardware-accelerated" one on WinXP.

  • Anonymous
    February 24, 2011
    ahahahaha...., jab: "REALLY? I click twice (start->program) in XP, how many times do you have to click in your start menu for notepad in example?" uhhhh, twice? ....actually.... really... :D

  • Anonymous
    February 24, 2011
    It's not a standard yet - the work in W3C will ensure that it gets there. But this is a great step forward in improving Internet privacy. I hope that Chrome stops dragging their feet even though it could hurt their ad tracking business. Getting all browser to support this will be important.

  • Anonymous
    February 24, 2011
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  • Anonymous
    February 24, 2011
    The comment has been removed

  • Anonymous
    February 24, 2011
    enjoyed reading

  • Anonymous
    February 24, 2011
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  • Anonymous
    February 24, 2011
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  • Anonymous
    February 24, 2011
    @laughing out loud I wouldn't invest in google if I were you then, since virtually all of their revenue comes from ads.

  • Anonymous
    February 24, 2011
    @Mark - incorrect.  Google makes virtually all of their revenue off advertisers wanting to place ads... and that plan works because Google provides the best results possible.  Not to mention a plethora of other amazing services that tie into it.

  • Anonymous
    February 24, 2011
    I would love a Tracking Protection List dedicated to creepy Google.

  • Anonymous
    February 24, 2011
    @thenonhacker - so would I. I am not a hacker either, otherwise I would do it now. who can build it first.

  • Anonymous
    February 24, 2011
    @laughing out loud - sorry, but there is a problem with your logic. If everyone installed mechanisms to block ads, then the willingness to pay for Internet advertising would go down (since no-one would see them). That is a huge problem for Google.

  • Anonymous
    February 24, 2011
    The only way to protect a user from tracking - is forced cleaning of caches / cookies and stuff, and limiting system data exposure. Yes, big US based companies will obey federal law, but what would prevent them from outsourcing tracking services to offshore subsidiaries ? - The answer in NOTHING. As for 3rd world, you can be sure that companies will happily ignore / circumvent so called "tracking protection" that will appear in IE9, FF4 and Chr. Yes, lists are good, and 3rd party domain blocking is good, too. But what will advertisers do ? they will just ask website owners to install a 'proxy' page, say 'bad-ad.php', which will be making third party data as first party, and thus - avoiding filters, that will be widespread by the end of 2011. And, well, some browsers might incorporate tracking on a system level ;) And write about it in EULA, so you either agree and install "cool browser", or stay with your "old and boring" one. But, nevertheless, its a good step in right direction. Thanx, IE team!

  • Anonymous
    February 24, 2011
    @  c69 To your last point: we already have that "cool browser"! It is called Chrome! Harry

  • Anonymous
    February 24, 2011
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  • Anonymous
    February 24, 2011
    Tracking protection should be enabled by default. This is a MUST!  Users are first, not companies spying on us! If you mean it seriously, it will be enabled by default.

  • Anonymous
    February 24, 2011
    Looking at the pichtire in the article. How does IE9 handle the situation that the tracking server and the ad server are the same server.

  • Anonymous
    February 24, 2011
    @Harry Richter - Is it correct that Chrome has built in user tracking? I did not know that. @c69 - Why can't someone like adblock build a tracking list that also blocks ads? Wouldn't it just be about blocking some domains?

  • Anonymous
    February 24, 2011
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  • Anonymous
    February 25, 2011
    Jab Creations, you really need to go back to school pal. Quit talking about your clients and go study how to form a coherent sentence. You seem to be under some delusion that you appear smart and that your opinions are of some value to others. Inferiority complex personified....

  • Anonymous
    February 25, 2011
    @ c69 Regarding your prediction of proxy pages, I think something like that could be used to help get around the filters (especially filters geared to block ads).  However, that proxy technique would make tracking much more difficult because any cookies created by one site's proxy would not be available to another site's proxy.  It's true that a centralized system could still try to perform tracking based on things like IP addresses, but that gets harder.  (For example, consumer IP addresses are typically dynamic and may change from time to time.)

  • Anonymous
    February 25, 2011
    @ Mike Dimmick Perhaps I did not make myself clear .I was referring to the 'Save Webpage' dialog that appears AFTER the Save button has been pressed. May be the ieteam ought to move 'Save Webpage' into the download manager like in Firefox.

  • Anonymous
    February 26, 2011
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  • Anonymous
    February 26, 2011
    The comment has been removed

  • Anonymous
    February 26, 2011
    I recently discovered the great quick tabs feature. Imo, it should be enabled by default, means it shouldn't be confined to the power user. Moreover, there should be some more information bind to the tabs' preview, may be some attributes of task management like how much resources, in terms of memory and CPU cycles, the tabs is consuming OR there should be some static task manager for all the open tabs group by their window (since quick tabs show the tabs contained by the current window only which does make sense).  I really want to see IE progressing in advanced tabs management and grouping. Question: If we club together multiple tabs in a pinned site to form a group (lets say an email group: consisting of hotmail, gmail & ymail), is it possible to assign a custom icon rather than the favicon of the first tab in that group? Please provide some customization at the group level.

  • Anonymous
    February 27, 2011
    @About_MSDN_IE_Blog - it may behave weird but then again this entire blog software is the pits and constantly having issues.  Without a doubt the IE blog has the worst most disfunctional behavior of any blogging software I have ever used hands down. I'm sure we could get enough donations from readers of this blog to buy MSFT a copy of whatever blogging software they want to use and we could get rid of this Community UnServer-able software once and for all. Posting now... and preying that it actually works today...

  • Anonymous
    February 27, 2011
    i want to use ie9 right now

  • Anonymous
    February 27, 2011
    @laughing out loud said: "For the millions that have discovered adblock and similar our Internet experience is 1,000 times better.  Since no decent equivalent exists for IE - Intelligent surfers simply don't use IE." Y'know, this blog post is describing a feature than can do exactly what AdBlock Plus does.  Just use the EasyList tracking protection list which uses the same filters as AdBlock Plus and you're there.

  • Anonymous
    February 27, 2011
    The comment has been removed

  • Anonymous
    February 27, 2011
    @Peter Simple adblock for IE is an add-on that is even simpler to use than Adblock plus and it uses the same easylist filter that Adblock plus uses. http://www.simple-adblock.com

  • Anonymous
    February 28, 2011
    Tracking Protection is really a nice feature, but it has a serious limitation, which can render it useless in the future. Tracking Protection lacks the ability to filter 1st-party content coming from the Main Site Server. The main site server can also integrate tracking pixel images or other unwanted content, that the user would like to filter. Additionally, because of this limitation, I anticipate that many sites will circumvent IE9 Tracking Protection by exploitng this limitation and route all tracking pixels, ads etc through the main site server, which is undesireable and could harm the Web more than it helps. Please let the user decide what they want to filter or not.

  • Anonymous
    February 28, 2011
    I've recently been having fun with the Windows Firewall blocking ad servers. The one problem I get into is when the same server is used to serve up display ads and ads which appear before viewing a video. Since the Firewall takes a while to flush its log to disk, and modifying the firewall requires admin perms, turning off the blocking to view one video is a bit of a pain. I hope this will be easier, with a way to go to the tracking protection and tell it to unblock, for a single website, once.

  • Anonymous
    February 28, 2011
    protection

  • Anonymous
    February 28, 2011
    @DanglingPointer - I miss the Quick Tab button from IE 9 that let me click rather than using a keyboard shortcut ;-) If you use pinned sites it's a little easier to see which IE instance is using more resources in task manager, but it could aways be easier...

  • Anonymous
    March 05, 2011
    @SnarkMaiden, I really like to see IE team utilizing the vacant space at top left corner or 70% from the left side in the top row to deploy the quick-tab and other tab-management button (such as; task-manager for open tabs!) Having said that, the zoom button can be moved from status bar to the said location and then they can certainly drop status bar with zero-items in it.

  • Anonymous
    March 06, 2011
    img846.imageshack.us/.../bench.png

  • Anonymous
    March 07, 2011
    IE is still very slow. What the engineers of IE will do about it? www.freeimagehosting.net/.../2c4456215d.png