By John P. Mello Jr. TechNewsWorld Part of the ECT News Network
03/15/05 7:53 AM PT
People who log onto Amazon and buy something give up their personal
information voluntarily, explained Karen Coyle of Computer
Professionals for Social Responsibility. But "if someone sends you a gift, you haven't agreed to give up your information, so it's gathering
information about people who have not agreed to be customers."
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Privacy advocates knocked Amazon.com (Nasdaq: AMZN) yesterday for a patent they claim will
jeopardize the privacy of children.
According to the patent approved by the U.S. Patent Office last week, the
invention "is a system and method of determining the age of an item
recipient, such a gift recipient."
While Amazon is known for its acumen in mining data it has collected from
its customers for boosting sales through cross-selling and up-selling, this
latest patent departs from the online mega-retailer's past practices in some
significant ways, according to Karen Coyle, a spokesperson for Computer
Professionals for Social Responsibility (CPSR) in Palo Alto, California.
Could Violate Federal Law
Unlike Amazon's typical data mining efforts, Coyle explained, this patent
shows that the company intends to target children.
"If you look at the patent and you look at what they're gathering, all the
information is being gathered about age-appropriate products," she told
TechNewsWorld. "There's really no such thing as age-appropriate products for
adults."
She explained that the system outlined in the patent allows Amazon to track
the age-appropriateness of gifts to a recipient over time in order to make
suggestions for future gifts.
Gathering information about children for an online retailer like Amazon can
be dicey because that practice is regulated by federal law, the
Children's Online Privacy and Protection Act, or COPPA.
"That law states that you cannot gather personal identification information
about a child without a parent's permission," Coyle said. "It looks like
there's a good chance that if they were to implement this patent, which they
claim they haven't, that they could come up against U.S. law."
Unwitting Gift Recipients
Another departure from existing practice suggested by the patent is that
Amazon intends to capture information from people who are not its customers,
Coyle noted.
"It's not gathering information about the person doing the purchasing," she
said. "It's about the recipient of a gift."
People who log onto Amazon and buy something give up their personal
information voluntarily, she explained. "If someone sends you a gift," she
said, "you haven't agreed to give up your information, so it's gathering
information about people who have not agreed to be customers.
"People who are making purchases and sending a gift are doing it with the
best of intentions," she continued. "A grandparent, for instance, purchasing
a gift for a grandchild is a very sweet thing to do, and I'm sure that
grandparent isn't thinking at that moment, 'I've just violated this poor
kid's privacy,' yet that is a fact.
"It's taking advantage of a vulnerable relationship," she added.
Along with CPSR, groups raising public objections to the practices outlined
in the patent included the Electronic Privacy Information Center and
Junkbusters, a consumer watchdog group.
Hypothetical Criticism
To some eyes, however, it isn't clear that the patent has kids in its laser
sight. "It's hard to tell if they're targeting kids or targeting parents who
are buying for the kids," Jeffrey D. Neuburger, a partner with Brown Raysman
Millstein Felder & Steiner in New York City, told TechNewsWorld.
And in any case, says Amazon spokesperson Patty Smith, the company has no plans to
implement the process detailed in the patent, which was filed with the
Patent Office five years ago.
She discounted the value of attacks on the patent. "It's hypothetical
criticism since this technology is not in use," she told TechNewsWorld.
She explained that it's not unusual for Amazon to file for patents that
won't be implemented. Five years ago, the processes in this patent seemed
like good ideas, but a lot of things can change in five years, she said.
She added that Amazon would never do anything to violate COPPA.
Keep Guard Up
Hypothetical or not, this latest privacy flap reveals once again that
consumers should never let their guard down when they're online, asserted
Neuburger.
"When people shop online they should be aware that everything that they're
doing is being collected and used in some way for analysis," he said.
"That's a fact. People have to understand that. And the question is whether
that's worth the trade-off of additional convenience."
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