DocumentCode
71937
Title
Paying for Privacy: Increasing the privacy and security comfort of end users.
Author
Lipoff, S.
Author_Institution
IP Action Partners Inc., USA
Volume
3
Issue
3
fYear
2014
fDate
Jul-14
Firstpage
76
Lastpage
78
Abstract
The recent revelations about the U.S. National Security Agency´s monitoring of electronic communications have rightly raised concerns about privacy issues. With the increasingly rare exceptions (e.g., calculators), today´s consumer electronics products are delivery platforms for services ranging from communications to entertainment. These services are provided by commercial organizations that require compensation to operate, and two basic business models for compensation have evolved: advertising support versus subscription fees. While the option of paying for privacy to avoid advertising exists, consumers have embraced widely popular advertising-based services so a wholesale shift to pay for privacy is unlikely to occur. In fact, the targeting of advertising to fit reader and viewer interests benefits both marketers and consumers and has always been practiced in all media to the extent that information has been available on consumer interests.
Keywords
advertising data processing; consumer electronics; data privacy; US National Security Agency; advertising support; advertising-based services; business models; consumer electronic products; consumer interests; electronic communications; end user privacy; end user security; reader interests; subscription fees; viewer interests; Advertising; Computer security; Government agencies; Internet; Network security; Privacy; Surveillance; Web sites;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Consumer Electronics Magazine, IEEE
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
2162-2248
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/MCE.2014.2317917
Filename
6844941
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