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Advertising
arrogance or stupidity
By Scott Bradner
I'm told that adware and
spyware are of the banes of your existence if you happen to use a Windows
computer anywhere near the Internet.
While that is not (yet?) the case for Mac (or Linux) users, I can feel
your pain, anger and disgust, or at least imagine it. What I cannot imagine is how any anyone ostensibly working
for a brand-name company could think that using these mechanisms to pitch the
company would do anything but engender disgust that would be transferred to the
brand.
The Associated Press has
caught quite a few major names being advertised by adware or spyware. The list includes J.C. penny, Capital
One, Vonage, Monster, Expedia, Orbitz, Speint, Sony, Circuit City, banks
pushing Visa cards, Mercedes-Benz, Netflix, and Verizon. Some of these have apparently heard and
understood the feedback they got from deciding to travel this particular low
road but others, including Sprint apparently don't care if their image gets
(further) damaged by how they decide to advertise. I guess Sprint figure that the disgust level is so high
already with phone companies that there is no additional down side and I guess
that Vonage is trying to go that last mile in imitating what is bad about phone
companies.
I can understand people
advertising understand body part enlargers, prescription male stamina pills
without the need for a prescription, and "genuine" Rolex watches
using adware and spyware to promote their products since they can't get any
lower in anyone's opinion poll.
But I do not understand what a company like Capital One expects to gain
by using a mechanism as reviled as adwware or spyware other than fewer
customers. (Maybe someone with a pile of Bank of America stock made the
decision to do this at Capital One.)
Adware and spyware,
almost always installed on the user's computer without the user's understanding
and generally without the user's knowledge, has attracted the attention of
lawmakers everywhere. (http://www.securitypark.co.uk/article.asp?articleid=23994&CategoryID=1
and http://www.phillyburbs.com/pb-dyn/news/147-06142005-502277.html) For
example, the U.S. House has OKed two bills that would put people distributing
spyware in jail. (I donŐt actually
expect the U.S. Senate to go along because it would be too pro-consumer for
that body.)
New York
Attorney General Eliot Spitzer (http://www.oag.state.ny.us/press/2005/apr/apr28a_05.html),
who far too often has had to fill in for sleeping federal regulators, has
discovered spyware and does not like what he sees. Last April Spitzer sued web marketer Intermix Media for
false advertising and deceptive business practices because it installed spyware
on the computers of unsuspecting Internet users.
(http://www.oag.state.ny.us/press/2005/apr/apr28a_05.html) Intermix Media recently agreed to stop
and to pay a fine of $7.5 million.
Intermix Media's CEO says that he has found religion and has even joined
a group trying to define best practices for Internet advertisers and has,
belatedly, hired a privacy officer.
(http://www.investors.com/breakingnews.asp?journalid=28262634&brk=1)
Spitzer does
not want to stop with the software distributors, he wants to take the companies
that pay for the adware and spyware to court. I expect that is about the only thing that might get through
to those who are supposedly in charge of some of these companies. Many of these leaders seem immune to
shame & other's revulsion, but we already knew that considering the
reaction to public disclosure of how much some of these "leaders" are
taking home.
disclaimer:
If any of those leaders are from Harvard I hope they learned their gluttony and
arrogance on the job. In any case,
I've not seen a university opinion about jailing spyware producers so the above
opinion must be mine.