![The web bug](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjr0dtrlIq7ECO8u94nNB9Vvm391ldMvLX24YcN1cLB5va5GpCCwWke12HRvpvy9fIw_2Y2_VWqmZbPZcab1mCSlMHQsmWhazLjq_GsE1cc_uEGZCfgbHrlI-GFFFqsQ7QVK4NA68cB1w/s320/bug.jpg)
Advertisers contract with data mining companies such as Experian, Datran, and Acxiom to identify people who match criteria of age, income, net worth, location, commodity ownership, purchasing patterns, and many others; Clifford reports that cookies placed on user's web browsers by Datran collect "50 to 100 pieces of information." I loved the cognitive dissonance displayed in the attitudes Clifford elicited from Patrick Williams, a publisher who made use of Acxiom to target potential subscribers for his money-management magazine: "'They are the scariest data research company around — they know far too much,' said Mr. Williams, who said he was very happy with the amount of information [Acxiom] gave him."
The situation is even worse than it's portrayed in the article. Clifford focusses exclusively on cookies and doesn't even mention web bugs and beacons, which collect personal information about you without your knowledge or consent.
Clifford ends the article with a telling quote from Paul Schwartz, a law professor at the University of California, Berkeley: "'Interactive media really gets into this creepy Orwellian thing, where it’s a record of our thoughts on the way to decision-making,' he said. 'We’re like the data-input clerks now for the industry.'"
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