"We want to give users control over their privacy while surfing the web, not force small web businesses to shut down"
How wonderfully considerate of them!
May I be the first to call BS?
Google's Chrome browser has added a Do Not Track option that will prevent websites using your browser history to target ads at you.* Pioneered by Mozilla Firefox, the Do Not Track convention adds a field in the HTTP header of each web page instructing websites not to take info about you from your browser. Commonly used to …
sigh, you beat me to it, and I was going to try a sarky comment, something about how considerate Google are, how they care (no, really!) for all those small web businesses, how valiant to stand in their defense, and my heart bleeds, and if it doesn't it soars at such uncorporate spirit.
that said... they're no worse than any business, which proclaims: "Our sole mission is to serve our customers!" Yeah, f... right!
None of us mind small and large shops making money from adds. Many of us mind being basically being stalked online by the add man. This movement BACK toward privacy was caused by abuse, perceived and real, that we are being overly monitored.
It's your own fault. Deal with it. Not like google is anywhere close to being poor.
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One major flaw in that argument is that many of the sites where they track visitors are *business* sites whose primary source of income ought to be the actual products and services they are selling or providing, not the sale of tracking information or advertising.
If tracking and displaying of adverts were restricted to sites where the owner has no other income whatsoever there would be less of a problem.
That add-on has been around for a while now (I'm sure it was amongst the blocks I put in place when I set up my most recent machine). Plus it's a third party one, so it's hardly "Google adds a button".
So to be more accurate "Google points people at a third party Chrome plug-in that's been around for ages anyway and many people who are savvy enough to want it have it anyway".
I have the Google Chrome Browser running on Windows XP. I don't see the "Do Not Track button". I've been through all the Chrome settings. Is there an actual button or is this some kind of oblique reference to the "Keep My Opt-Outs" extension which has been around for a long time?
http://www.theregister.co.uk/Design/graphics/icons/comment/fail_32.png
Not at all, i haven't clicked on an add since the early days of 'punch the monkey' and don't intend to do so - so where is this money i would be otherwise generating coming from?
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On the details tab of the store, there is a list of websites affected (at the bottom of the column on the right. You need to hover over "see all" to see the full list.)
I don't know what the addresses for Google's services are, but I can't see google.com or adwords.com on that list. Doubleclick is on the list; does google serve all it's ads via that domain?