The online advertising network Phorm has
been criticised by a leading internet think tank on the grounds that its data
gathering system is illegal.
Phorm collects information on web users by examining the sites they visit and
building up a profile of their interests, which advertisers use to target them
with relevant promotions and banners. The network is already used by several UK
internet service providers, including BT,
Virgin Media and
TalkTalk.
But the fact that Phorm does not ask for a user's consent before it conducts
these activities makes it illegal, according to the
Foundation for Information Policy Research
(FIPR). The group expressed its concerns yesterday in an open letter to Richard
Thomas, the information commissioner.
"Classification by scanning in this way seems to us to be highly intrusive,"
said Nicholas Bohm and Richard Clayton, the general counsel and treasurer of the
FIPR.
"We think that it should not be undertaken without explicit consent from
users who have been given particularly clear information about what is liable to
be scanned. Failure to establish a clear and transparent opt-in system is likely
to render the entire process illegal and open to challenge in UK and European
courts."
Both Phorm and BT deny that the advertising network is breaking the law. The
legal argument rests upon interpretation of the
Regulation of
Investigatory Powers Act 2000, which covers the interception of
communications.
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