Post by Slinger on Mar 20, 2019 12:49:25 GMT
Online tools which track user behaviour for advertisers have been found on a swathe of EU public health websites, including NHS and Gov.uk pages.
These trackers could compromise sensitive data about people, according to researchers at data protection compliance service Cookiebot.
The researchers also discovered trackers on 89% of EU government websites.
Most of the trackers were developed by Google.
They were designed to "...associate web activity with the identities of real people," Cookiebot said.
Of all the 28 EU member states, only Spanish, German and Dutch government websites were tracker-free.
"We, of course, expect everyone to fully comply with EU data protection rules and it is the responsibility of EU data protection authorities to ensure compliance," a spokeswoman for the European Commission said.
n a statement, Google said, "We do not permit publishers to use our technology to collect or build targeting lists based on users' sensitive information, including health conditions like pregnancy or HIV."
"The UK government urgently needs to ensure that its own websites, especially health and welfare sites, are not handing sensitive personal data to advertisers so that they can profile and monetise knowledge about very private topics," Jim Killock at the Open Rights Group told the BBC.
"This kind of practice is in our view unlawful, both on the grounds of needing explicit consent and on the grounds that it is impossible to know where the information about you ends up, once it is placed into advertising bidding systems."
SOURCE
I don't know about you, but the insidious rise of this sort of tracking worries me, not a little. It's not just the fact that we're being tracked without our knowledge or consent, but also, who's responsible for that tracking, and the thought that the bodies on whose websites the trackers are lodged probably don't have a clue about the final destination of the collated information. Nor do they seem to care.
The UK Information Commissioner's Office said it was "looking into" tracking and other technologies used for targeting online advertising.
These trackers could compromise sensitive data about people, according to researchers at data protection compliance service Cookiebot.
The researchers also discovered trackers on 89% of EU government websites.
Most of the trackers were developed by Google.
They were designed to "...associate web activity with the identities of real people," Cookiebot said.
Of all the 28 EU member states, only Spanish, German and Dutch government websites were tracker-free.
"We, of course, expect everyone to fully comply with EU data protection rules and it is the responsibility of EU data protection authorities to ensure compliance," a spokeswoman for the European Commission said.
n a statement, Google said, "We do not permit publishers to use our technology to collect or build targeting lists based on users' sensitive information, including health conditions like pregnancy or HIV."
"The UK government urgently needs to ensure that its own websites, especially health and welfare sites, are not handing sensitive personal data to advertisers so that they can profile and monetise knowledge about very private topics," Jim Killock at the Open Rights Group told the BBC.
"This kind of practice is in our view unlawful, both on the grounds of needing explicit consent and on the grounds that it is impossible to know where the information about you ends up, once it is placed into advertising bidding systems."
SOURCE
I don't know about you, but the insidious rise of this sort of tracking worries me, not a little. It's not just the fact that we're being tracked without our knowledge or consent, but also, who's responsible for that tracking, and the thought that the bodies on whose websites the trackers are lodged probably don't have a clue about the final destination of the collated information. Nor do they seem to care.
The UK Information Commissioner's Office said it was "looking into" tracking and other technologies used for targeting online advertising.