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TiVo To Sell Customer Data

camusflage writes "Yahoo has a story that details TiVo's plans to sell customer data to advertisers and broadcasters. While individuals will be anonymous, data will be made available in aggregate form, including ZIP code. The San Jose Mercury News has additional coverage on the news."

469 comments

  1. Good for them... by GreenJeepMan · · Score: 5, Insightful

    No one individuals personal privacy has been violated. So what is the big deal? Hopefully if they can sustain enough income from this, they can drop their monthly fees.

    1. Re:Good for them... by Ron+Harwood · · Score: 4, Insightful

      So they can drop their monthly fees???

      Last time I checked - they were a 'for profit' business... monthly fees + selling of data = more profit ~= happier shareholders.

    2. Re:Good for them... by L.+VeGas · · Score: 3, Funny

      Hopefully if they can sustain enough income from this, they can drop their monthly fee

      Right.... and monkeys will fly out of my butt. And hell? That's right. Frozen over.

    3. Re:Good for them... by drinkypoo · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Maybe you should just hope that they get enough income from this to stay in business. :P

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    4. Re:Good for them... by homer_ca · · Score: 3, Insightful

      It all depends on where and when the info is aggregated. If they have a raw database WITH the personally identifying information, that would be very dangerous simply because it exists. Any present promises of only using it in aggregate won't be worth the bits they're printed on in a bankruptcy proceeding.

    5. Re:Good for them... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      No one individuals personal privacy has been violated


      What if you're the only subscriber in that zip code? It might not happen in the USA where, as i understand it, the zip codes encompass many. In Canada (if they roll out the service here), the postal codes specify you down the the street block - or apartment building. It could get a little personal for us.

    6. Re:Good for them... by PhilHibbs · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Yes, but maybe dropped fees = more customers = more profit.

    7. Re:Good for them... by Lt+Razak · · Score: 1
      No it doesn't!!!

      Just because you have 6 characters, and some are alpha, doesn't give you nearly enough to get down to the apartment building, eh!

    8. Re:Good for them... by Hypocritical+Guy · · Score: 1

      Right.... and monkeys will fly out of my butt. And hell? That's right. Frozen over.

      Got any more boring cliches you want to regurgitate?

      --
      If you liked licking my balls, add me to your foes list!
    9. Re:Good for them... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      more profit = more competition = lower prices

    10. Re:Good for them... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Does the pope shit in the woods?!

    11. Re:Good for them... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No one individuals personal privacy has been violated

      Zip codes are XXXXX-YYYY. So you may not have your name on the data, but with the full zip code, what does that matter?

    12. Re:Good for them... by gazbo · · Score: 0

      Your mastery of the price/demand curve is truly breathtaking. Perhaps you should email their financial director with this astonishing and novel theory nay FACT!

    13. Re:Good for them... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If the Pope shits in the woods, does he make a sound?

    14. Re:Good for them... by Ron+Harwood · · Score: 1

      You ascribe more long-term vision and wisdom to a corporation than I am willing to myself.

    15. Re:Good for them... by swordboy · · Score: 1

      No one individuals personal privacy has been violated. So what is the big deal?

      You must be new to slashdot - welcome!

      In any event, there really isn't a big deal. It might make commercials better and likely to be watched. You might start getting commercials that are relevant to your needs. Astounding!

      While they are at it, I'd wish that TiVo would add a rate-this-commercial button to the remote so that we could tell the advertisers which commercials AREN'T working (i.e. - I stopped going to Arby's because of those stupid Barry White/seizure garbage things that they had a while back. I let Arby's know via their website and the commercials went away. I'd like to believe that they changed to the oven mit guy because of me).

      While I have your attention, "The New TNN" is becoming "SpikeTV" - a network for men. Go tell them what YOU want to see, if you are a guy, of course. I hardly see how this could be a bad thing...

      --

      Life is the leading cause of death in America.
    16. Re:Good for them... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      i'll have to run it through my cost benefit computer first.

    17. Re:Good for them... by DonGar · · Score: 5, Informative

      I've done contract work for Tivo. They do NOT have a database of all this data tied to a specific person. Internally, they are very aware of the dangers, and very paranoid. This stuff is partially anonymized before it's uploaded, and is anonymized more fully as it's moved into their backend databases.

      I should also point out that users have the option of opting in 'fully', or opting out 'fully' of data sharing. Most users stick with the default 'anonymous only' privacy option for their account. Probably because it's the default, and you have to ask customer service to change this one way or the other. Through maybe it's a question when you activate your account (I forget).

      --
      plus-good, double-plus-good
    18. Re:Good for them... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And what is the sound, of one hand wiping?

    19. Re:Good for them... by L.+VeGas · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      Howzabout...

      If you can't say anything nice, don't say anything at all.

      or

      I might be boring, but I sure am stupid.

    20. Re:Good for them... by PyrotekNX · · Score: 0, Troll

      You are brainwashed by the government. The government is consolodating all media, they will have control over 100% of all tv broadcasts when digital cable is the only standard. This is the way how they can shape their propoganda to suit the needs of none other than the cia. By knowing the watching patterns of all the people with a tivo, they will infiltrate the programs they are watching the most and insert their propoganda into those shows. This is an instrument of slavery and nothing else. Remember tivo uses AI to figure out what someone wants to watch, this will only improve in the future! Don't say that you weren't warned. If I had a Tivo, I would get rid of it and boycott it for life.

    21. Re:Good for them... by cshark · · Score: 2, Interesting

      It's actually pretty cool.

      Might mean that broadcasters can actually release relevant programming for indavidual markets for a change.

      I think it's great.

      The outcome can only mean more star trek in my local area.

      So life is good.

      --

      This signature has Super Cow Powers

    22. Re:Good for them... by siskbc · · Score: 1
      Last time I checked - they were a 'for profit' business... monthly fees + selling of data = more profit ~= happier shareholders.

      Well, network TV is for profit and free. And newspapers that cost $0.50 cost more than that to distribute. It's all about whether the extra revenue from advertisers outweigh the lower fees.

      --

      -Looking for a job as a materials chemist or multivariat

    23. Re:Good for them... by agallagh42 · · Score: 1

      Actually, yes, it does. That gives 17,576,000 possibilities, and in a country of ~30,000,000 people, that's enough for one for every two people. Way more than enough to give one to every block, or one to every apartment building, which is what they do. Most suburban streets have two, one for the even numbered houses, and one for the odd numbered houses on the other side of the street.

      --
      Carpe Cerevisi - Seize the Beer
    24. Re:Good for them... by stanmann · · Score: 1

      Practically speaking, the only reason Time, Newsweek, your local newspaper and any other major magazine charge anything is that the advertisers wouldn't pay the big bucks for advertising in a "free" publication. Obviously, the distribution channel gets a cut, but even if the advertisers had to pay for distribution, the magazine(s)/Newspaper(s) would make $$$ from advertising(see radio/TV). And of course the myth(debunked) that advertising has any impact on sales. You believe that the magazine you pay for has value, so you pay for it. The advertisers believe you will pay attention to advertising in a vehicle that has value and also pay for it

      3. Profit!!

      --
      Food not Bombs is a nice platitude but it breaks down when you notice that the Bombees are usually well fed
    25. Re:Good for them... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      the only reason Time, Newsweek, your local newspaper and any other major magazine charge anything is that the advertisers wouldn't pay the big bucks for advertising in a "free" publication.

      You're right, I never thought of that. I can't think of a single expection to this, as long as I don't think about oh, television, radio, vertical market publications, etc.

    26. Re:Good for them... by Anna+Merikin · · Score: 1

      Obviously, like most people, you don't understand statistics. If you have a list with four variables, say, sex, age, zipcode and viewing habits, and add to it a list with some other variables, say, sex, name, age and zipcode, you can very easily determine six or seven variables for any individual on both lists, That's the danger. You give your name and SSN to one vendor and he sells the list you're on to someone else, you has your address and sex, etc,. until DoubleClick or whoever has full info on you.

    27. Re:Good for them... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Really?

      So if you're the only one with a Tivo in your zip code that watches some "violent" show Cowboy Bebop, and someone gets their eye plucked out, you won't have a problem with your data, which was sold, being mined?

      60 some years ago, the government ran a dragnet through parts of California for now so called Japanese-Americans. The man didn't have one shred of identifiable, personal information. They had numbers by block. Good enough for a very effective roundup.

      Seemed pretty effective in retrospect. Easy to mine from if they have one other decent information source to correlate, say, purchases off of (oh, gee, all those internet sites you may have purchased from).

      Then again, maybe I'm the only person that gets a little irked, being a bio major, when he gets "IT" or "engineer" mail, because some ass mined domain registrations and thinks because I own a domain name, I have some other training.

      In my opinion, this is the TRUE reason to build your own PVR. (As well as customization. Lower cost of ownership. Expandability. Flexibility to multiple and networked setups.)

      To all the Tivo brand whores--yes, the tech may be well and good. But I don't believe a company that shares a time shifting digital patent (Tivo does), a company that sells customer's information (anyone else would be getting utterly slammed a LONG TIME ago on /.), and a company that supports mpeg2 patents without a further thought deserves to be supported. At all.

      Then again, cheap and Linux seems to be the mainstay of the /. crowd over any sort of integrity. Anyone else would be getting spit on if they did this. I get the impression Tivo lovers support the company really because if they didn't, they'd own a near useless box.

    28. Re:Good for them... by GreenJeepMan · · Score: 1

      Probably true. But to my knowledge all Tivo tracks (and is selling in this case) is Zipcode and viewing habbits. Statistically that doesn't bear enough information to trace back to an individual.

    29. Re:Good for them... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      They don't have to. It's been shown time and time again that not having personally identifying information still allows effective finding and tracking of specific individuals.

      Do you honestly believe Tivo is the first company or member of an industry that has to battle this? The ENTIRE health care community has dealt with this for decades, from trial studies to ER records to HMO contracts to federal VA databases.

      And what have they shown? That they CAN do it. I remember a professor stat boy for the NIH telling the class how they cross-correlated 2 studies and pulled specific individuals out to do further studies. Then, as a test and for a paper (they had permission from some governing body, if I recall a followup question from a classmate), pulled those individuals out by records. They were right.

      At least the health care industry somewhat has ethics and regulations regarding such information (e.g. far less so with HMO bodies). It's a joke if you think Tivo has a clue. They obviously don't, because they cannot control downstream data collaboration of those they sell the information to. And if they did, they wouldn't sell crap, because it'd be useless to the buyers.

    30. Re:Good for them... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ask an altar boy I am sure they wipe for him...

    31. Re:Good for them... by Alien+Being · · Score: 1

      No one individuals personal privacy has been violated.

      Still, the ostensible reason Tivo has this info in the first place is to provide a service to a paying customer. It would have been possible to put the "season pass" and "thumbs up" logic on the client, but they decided to implement it serverside where they can have access to the data.

      Now, they are using this info for their own direct gains. The benefits and/or detriments to the consumer are arguable, yet they assume the consumer is willing to participate. IMO, Tivo should be opt-in rather than opt-out.

      Hopefully if they can sustain enough income from this, they can drop their monthly fees.

      Yeah sure. And my left testicle is large enough that I can afford to chop of my right one. It's not gonna happen though, at least not by choice.

      The whole idea of having to pay for program listings is BS. It's in the advertiser's, producer's, and broadcaster's best interest for their listings to be seen by as many people as possible. Tivo's competitors should tell the broadcasters that they are planning to offer free listings (xml over usenet maybe) and that each broadcaster is responsible for providing their schedules, else be invisible to the viewers.

    32. Re:Good for them... by stanmann · · Score: 1

      You mean Industry type publications that cost $5-10US for 100- pages and require a $200US annual membership and don't carry ads?? Oh and don't pay contributors of articles?? Or are you talking about stuff like the drug magazines that doctors "subscribe" too that charge $50K for a 2 page "article" selling the latest hot new drug?

      --
      Food not Bombs is a nice platitude but it breaks down when you notice that the Bombees are usually well fed
    33. Re:Good for them... by jwilloug · · Score: 1

      Still, the ostensible reason Tivo has this info in the first place is to provide a service to a paying customer. It would have been possible to put the "season pass" and "thumbs up" logic on the client, but they decided to implement it serverside where they can have access to the data.

      Umm, they are implemented on the client. Unplug the phone line and both of those will continue to work just fine. For a several days anyway, before the guide data runs out or the TiVo decides you're not paying for your account.

    34. Re:Good for them... by BroncoInCalifornia · · Score: 1

      This reminds me of those scenes in the old TV show "Max Headroom". The television executives would have these meters showing the ratings instantaneously. The needles on these meters were fluctuating second by second. They had instant access to the aggregate viewing of the public.

      --

      Religion is the main cause of atheism.

    35. Re:Good for them... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I believe that anytime anyone uses my personal information / usage data, and profits from it, I should be compensated for it...nothing is for free...so how does TiVo expect to take my information and the information of others and profit from it and not compenstate the user(s)???

      isn't that stealing??? it seems like they can get away with it and no one says anything... If I were to sell information about TiVo for a profit, don't you think they will want some of that profit too.... THINK ABOUT THIS FOR A SECOND!

    36. Re:Good for them... by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      The sad fact of the matter is that the masses don't need a dedicated propaganda machine. Profit driven corporations are more than willing to restrict themselves to telling the drones what they want to hear. Oddly enough, this rather resembles formal propaganda. Governement control of media outlets and overt manipulators like Goebels simply aren't necessary.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    37. Re:Good for them... by texaport · · Score: 1

      Add revenue so they can drop their fees? Banks originally got people to use ATMs instead of tellers by saying they cost fifty cents per transaction instead of a buck. Now the banks charge US more for the privilege of helping THEIR bottom line in the first place.

    38. Re:Good for them... by Alyeska · · Score: 1
      Here's the big deal.

      We keep handing all of this valuable data away to information warehouses, where its sifted into reports. Those reports tell companies (or political campaigns, etc.) how to *act* in order to increase profits. Instead of listening to what customers want and competitively responding, companies have learned that they can instead manipulate the wants of people.

      Data like this has only one real valuable purpose: to teach corporations and governments, churches, or any other power-seekers how to lie more successfully.

      And remember, if they can make a profit from it, that money is coming from somewhere -- the billions and billions of dollars spent in monitoring us is added to the prices of our goods.... Kind of like "Brazil" -- we have to pay for our own information retrieval.

    39. Re:Good for them... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      You mean Industry type publications that cost $5-10US for 100- pages and require a $200US annual membership and don't carry ads??

      No, that's not what I mean. That would be stupid, since the point was that free publications get plenty of advertizing. There are many many publications that go out free to qualified readers. Infoworld, for instance.

    40. Re:Good for them... by LedZeplin · · Score: 1

      I feel that it's the initial investment in the system that are keeping people away, not as much the monthly fee. People who don't have a tivo don't know why they would want to pay over 300 dollars for a VCR.

      I think Tivo made a mistake by retiring the series 1 instead of selling them cheap to get it in more homes. But what do I know, I don't run a bussiness, I just watch TV.

    41. Re:Good for them... by cwerdna · · Score: 1

      Keep in mind that they still have yet to make a profit. I'm all for this.

      I completely believe that they are following their privacy policy. I have two Tivos and have no worries. In fact, I'm am opted IN so that they can monitor ME individually as to what I do on my Tivo (for their Lieberman Research thing awhile back), not just down to the zip code level.

      This selling of data slightly decreases the chance that what I watch will NOT be cancelled.

    42. Re:Good for them... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think Tivo made a mistake by retiring the series 1 instead of selling them cheap to get it in more homes. But what do I know, I don't run a bussiness, I just watch TV. They are adding their techology to some DVD players, with no season pass capability, with the option to upgrade to a full service level. This is supposed to add a marginial cost to the DVD player.

    43. Re:Good for them... by andrewski · · Score: 1

      Yeah, but can they compete with Windows Media Center Edition XP, where the program guide + everything else is free?

      Didn't think so.

    44. Re:Good for them... by HTH+NE1 · · Score: 1

      One enters only the 5-digit zip code into a TiVo. And the accuracy of the zip code is only dependent upon whether you can get your cable company's lineup (or antenna lineup if you dare try) in the zip code you enter.

      Unfortunately, people living in small towns with a single zip code and little TiVo penetration are more vulnerable to association to their viewer data, especially if their cable company doesn't provide identical service to multiple communities.

      Still, it seems one can effectively opt out of the selling of this information by delaying when you watch your recordings. It was interesting to see that some commercial during the Super Bowl was the most viewed with TiVos before I even had a chance to watch it myself. (And I watch the Super Bowl only for the commercials, skipping all the plays.)

      TiVo hiring a data mining firm to associate subscribers to e-mail addresses, where that firm acquired their database partially from WHOIS in violation of the WHOIS license agreement, now that's something to complain loudly about!

      --
      Oh, say does that Star-Spangled Banner entwine / The myrtle of Venus with Bacchus's vine?
    45. Re:Good for them... by lord_nightrose · · Score: 0

      You do realize that you just said that a company whose major source of income is monthly fees would make MORE money by getting MORE subscribers to NOT pay those fees? That's like saying the government will make money by cutting all taxes.

      --
      This is not part of my post. It's my signature. I bet you're disappointed.
    46. Re:Good for them... by stanmann · · Score: 1

      Oh, you mean publications that require you to fill out a 10 page survey and fit the appropriate demographic in order to subscribe. Oh, and don't forget. YOu must continue to qualify each year.

      --
      Food not Bombs is a nice platitude but it breaks down when you notice that the Bombees are usually well fed
    47. Re:Good for them... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What does that have to do with the topic? Or do you just continue to grope for things to say rather than acknowledge you were mistaken?

    48. Re:Good for them... by stanmann · · Score: 1

      You mentioned Infoworld as an alleged exception. I just subscribed to infoworld and had to go through 10 pages of survey, and send it in to find out if I was eligible to subscribe. Definitely not free. 20 minutes of my time+my demographic information is worth rather more than $16 which is what a annual subscription to time or newsweek would cost. You claim I'm wrong, but you haven't come up with any examples. Further, you have elected to not post logged in, which suggests that you are a nothing more than an articulate troll.

      --
      Food not Bombs is a nice platitude but it breaks down when you notice that the Bombees are usually well fed
    49. Re:Good for them... by Lt+Razak · · Score: 1

      They haven't been spacing out the charcter'd zip codes evenly thoughout the country though. The metro areas will run out, just like the area codes. And unlike area codes, you can't have a 3G7 B8G next to 8B3 D7A

    50. Re:Good for them... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      You claim I'm wrong, but you haven't come up with any examples.

      As long as you overlook where I typed "television" and "radio." (Good point about Infoworld not really being free, though.)

    51. Re:Good for them... by stanmann · · Score: 1

      Name names... TV guide isn't free. And since I'm not in the industry, I don't know what the industry equivalent to Infoworld is. But since it is an industry rag, I would assume that it carries the same free but not requirements.

      --
      Food not Bombs is a nice platitude but it breaks down when you notice that the Bombees are usually well fed
  2. Demographics are not an invasion of privacy. by blair1q · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Unless you own your own zip-code (Ted Turner) this does not affect your "rights" in any way.

    1. Re:Demographics are not an invasion of privacy. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Its not quite so simple. The population in my Zip code is small enough that it wouldn't surprise me if there are only a handful of other Tivo owners. I am still not sure if this bothers me or not, but I'd be happier if the Zip code were removed.

    2. Re:Demographics are not an invasion of privacy. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think Alan Ralsky also has his own zip-code, thanks in part to the /. crowd.

    3. Re:Demographics are not an invasion of privacy. by wowbagger · · Score: 1, Insightful

      That would depend upon whether they use a standard ZIP or a ZIP+4 - because a ZIP+4 DOES resolve down to a single house.

    4. Re:Demographics are not an invasion of privacy. by aborchers · · Score: 3, Interesting

      a ZIP+4 DOES resolve down to a single house.


      Then why do people need to write the rest of my address on the envelope? Zip+4 may in some cases may indicate as much as the same apartment building (if it has sufficient units) or resolve to the same single-family house if you happen to be the only house for miles around (in which case you probably never use the +4) but I doubt these cases are abundant.

      However, you do have an interesting point...

      --
      Trouble making decisions? Just flip for it.
    5. Re:Demographics are not an invasion of privacy. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Then why do people need to write the rest of my address on the envelope?

      Because you might live at 123 Cyberlane Drive and someone else lives at 123 Cyberlane Court.

    6. Re:Demographics are not an invasion of privacy. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      5-digit zip code or 9-digit zip code? A 9-digit zip code does not give much privacy (only a few addresses per).

    7. Re:Demographics are not an invasion of privacy. by psxndc · · Score: 1
      Zip+4 may in some cases may indicate as much as the same apartment building (if it has sufficient units) ... but I doubt these cases are abundant.

      I'm guessing you don't live in Boston (or NYC, or ___fill_in_the_blank_major_city___) where EVERYone lives in an apt building.

      :-)

      psxndc

      --

      The emacs religion: to be saved, control excess.

    8. Re:Demographics are not an invasion of privacy. by cheezedawg · · Score: 2, Informative
      ZIP+4 DOES resolve down to a single house.

      Not really- it can, but most cases it doesnt.
      http://www.usps.com/zip4/zipfaq.htm
      Q. Why are ZIP+4 Codes used?
      A. In 1983, the Postal Service began using an expanded ZIP Code called "ZIP+4." A ZIP+4 Code consists of the original 5-digit ZIP Code plus a 4-digit add-on code. The 4-digit add-on number identifies a geographic segment within the 5-digit delivery area, such as a city block, office building, individual high-volume receiver of mail, or any other unit that would aid efficient mail sorting and delivery.
      --
      "The defense of freedom requires the advance of freedom" - George W Bush
    9. Re:Demographics are not an invasion of privacy. by passion · · Score: 5, Informative

      Not quite... taken from USPS

      Q. Why are ZIP+4 Codes used?

      A. In 1983, the Postal Service began using an expanded ZIP Code called "ZIP+4." A ZIP+4 Code consists of the original 5-digit ZIP Code plus a 4-digit add-on code. The 4-digit add-on number identifies a geographic segment within the 5-digit delivery area, such as a city block, office building, individual high-volume receiver of mail, or any other unit that would aid efficient mail sorting and delivery. Use of the 4-digit add-on is not mandatory, but it helps the Postal Service direct mail more efficiently and accurately because it reduces handling and significantly decreases the potential for human error and possibility of misdelivery. It also will lead to better control over USPS costs and, in turn, postage rate stability. ZIP+4 is intended for use primarily by business mailers who prepare their mail with typewritten, machine-printed, or computerized addressing formats that can be read by the Postal Service's automated scanners during processing. Mailers who qualify receive a rate discount on First-Class, non-presorted, ZIP+4 mailings of at least 250 pieces and on presorted ZIP+4 mailings of at least 500 pieces. There are also ZIP+4 discounts for bulk business mail.

      --
      - passion
    10. Re:Demographics are not an invasion of privacy. by Quixote · · Score: 1, Redundant
      because a ZIP+4 DOES resolve down to a single house.

      ZIP+4 does not resolve to a single house. It resolves to a block of houses, or in the case of apartments, a group of apartments.

      Check the related USPS FAQ about ZIP+4 codes.

    11. Re:Demographics are not an invasion of privacy. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is the TiVo police.

      You have previously been declared TiVo retarded.

      Please refrain from psoting in TiVo related threads, otherwise punitive action will follow.

      Thank you for your immediate cooperation.

    12. Re:Demographics are not an invasion of privacy. by mr_z_beeblebrox · · Score: 1

      or resolve to the same single-family house if you happen to be the only house for miles around (in which case you probably never use the +4) but I doubt these cases are abundant.

      My parents live in a smaller town (population 700) their zip+4 resolves to their house.

    13. Re:Demographics are not an invasion of privacy. by jimand · · Score: 1

      An excellent questions here in Canada. At Christmas a relative mailed a card to me with the correct address but mistakenly put my parent's postal code on the envelope. My parents received the card intended for me. Same province, different city so obviously they didn't look at the address.

    14. Re:Demographics are not an invasion of privacy. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So some evil corporation out there will know that somewhere within your zipcode there is somebody that has Tivo that likes to watch daytime soaps. How does this affect your privacy again?

    15. Re:Demographics are not an invasion of privacy. by wowbagger · · Score: 1

      Sorry, but MY ZIP+4 does indeed resolve to my house, and my house only.

      True, maybe I over-generalized in saying that ZIP+4 resolves to a house - it does not ALWAYS resolve to a house, but it frequently DOES.

      And that is why I made the point about ZIP vx. ZIP+4 - when ANYBODY says that "oh, we aggregate the data to a ZIP code, nothing to worry about", IF by "ZIP Code" they mean "ZIP+4 code" then their "aggregation" may be to a house level.

    16. Re:Demographics are not an invasion of privacy. by extrarice · · Score: 1

      [quote]
      because a ZIP+4 DOES resolve down to a single house
      [/quote]

      According to the USPS ZIP-code FAQ (http://www.usps.com/zip4/zipfaq.htm):

      Q. Why are ZIP+4 Codes used?
      A. In 1983, the Postal Service began using an expanded ZIP Code called "ZIP+4." A ZIP+4 Code consists of the original 5-digit ZIP Code plus a 4-digit add-on code. The 4-digit add-on number identifies a geographic segment within the 5-digit delivery area, such as a city block, office building, individual high-volume receiver of mail, or any other unit that would aid efficient mail sorting and delivery. Use of the 4-digit add-on is not mandatory, but it helps the Postal Service direct mail more efficiently and accurately because it reduces handling and significantly decreases the potential for human error and possibility of misdelivery. It also will lead to better control over USPS costs and, in turn, postage rate stability. ZIP+4 is intended for use primarily by business mailers who prepare their mail with typewritten, machine-printed, or computerized addressing formats that can be read by the Postal Service's automated scanners during processing. Mailers who qualify receive a rate discount on First-Class, non-presorted, ZIP+4 mailings of at least 250 pieces and on presorted ZIP+4 mailings of at least 500 pieces. There are also ZIP+4 discounts for bulk business mail.

      --end USPS text--

      For example, the city I live in, Mt. Shasta, the +4 extension is the same for every piece of mail in the city. (it's a small town)

      --
      "Jesus saves, but everyone else in a 10 foot radius takes full damage from the fireball."
    17. Re:Demographics are not an invasion of privacy. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My parents live in a smaller town (population 700) their zip+4 resolves to their house.


      I think you can safely remove the 'er' and say small town... in fact, I'd go as far as postfixing ass to it. As in small ass town.

    18. Re:Demographics are not an invasion of privacy. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The zip code is the first item in the sort. What probably happened is that it got to your parent's zip and even though the address was wrong the human sorter noticed that they had the same last name as yours. In small towns this is quite common. Where my parent's live you could probably just write their name and zip code and it would find them (although the receiving post office probably wouldn't reject it).

    19. Re:Demographics are not an invasion of privacy. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Witness the randomness of /. moderators. 5 identical posts, and only one of them gets modded up (not even the earliest of the 5, either).

    20. Re:Demographics are not an invasion of privacy. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Selling my personal data (even if it's anonymous) it's violation of my rights.

    21. Re:Demographics are not an invasion of privacy. by TamMan2000 · · Score: 1

      Selling my personal data (even if it's anonymous) it's violation of my rights.

      Only if they agree not to before you do business with them...

      If you don't like, let them know by not using TiVo

      --
      "I'll have a Guinness, no wait, make that a Coors Light" -Grad student I work with, who shall remain anonymous...
    22. Re:Demographics are not an invasion of privacy. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      D'ja ever notice how most people in small ass towns have enormous asses? Curious.

    23. Re:Demographics are not an invasion of privacy. by wowbagger · · Score: 1

      (duping so the rest of /. will see it)

      Sorry, but MY ZIP+4 does indeed resolve to my house, and my house only.

      True, maybe I over-generalized in saying that ZIP+4 resolves to a house - it does not ALWAYS resolve to a house, but it frequently DOES.

      And that is why I made the point about ZIP vx. ZIP+4 - when ANYBODY says that "oh, we aggregate the data to a ZIP code, nothing to worry about", IF by "ZIP Code" they mean "ZIP+4 code" then their "aggregation" may be to a house level.

    24. Re:Demographics are not an invasion of privacy. by zenray · · Score: 2, Informative

      In my case since I have a PO BOX thr +4 is my box number. I'd say that IDs mew faily well.

      --
      zenray
    25. Re:Demographics are not an invasion of privacy. by FearUncertaintyDoubt · · Score: 1
      a ZIP+4 DOES resolve down to a single house.

      Then, by your logic, there are no more than 10,000 addresses in any zip code. That seems a bit low.

    26. Re:Demographics are not an invasion of privacy. by M.C.+Hampster · · Score: 5, Insightful

      True, maybe I over-generalized in saying that ZIP+4 resolves to a house - it does not ALWAYS resolve to a house, but it frequently DOES.

      This one statement almost completely sums up most of what is wrong with the mentality of Slashdot. You have one experience where ZIP+4 resolves to your house and your house only, so you generalize it to mean that it does for everyone. When people point out that it does not for everyone, you retract your statement, only to replace it by another one in which you no data. If you see some of the other posts here, linking to the USPS web site, you will see that for most people, it does not link to a particular house.

      --
      Forget the whales - save the babies.
    27. Re:Demographics are not an invasion of privacy. by Ctrl-Z · · Score: 1


      For the most part, I think that the postal code is used for routing the mail across the country. Once it gets to the postal code, the letter carrier needs the address to know what residence/box to drop it off at. I suppose it's possible that the carrier recognized the name (assuming your parents have the same last name as you) and dropped the letter off there.

      --
      www.timcoleman.com is a total waste of your time. Never go there.
    28. Re:Demographics are not an invasion of privacy. by Quixote · · Score: 1
      Sorry, but MY ZIP+4 does indeed resolve to my house, and my house only.

      What is your ZIP+4 code? I can tell you conclusively what it resolves to (I have access to the databases).

    29. Re:Demographics are not an invasion of privacy. by aborchers · · Score: 1

      It was the "only house for miles around" case I meant to say wasn't abundant these days. Dang my sloppy grammar...

      Actually, the complex I moved out of last Fall had such a situation, where +4s in the neighborhood resolved to groups of 2 or 3 buildings. To the initial point, in my view it's not an invasion of individual privacy to know what someone in a building housing 200 watches anymore than it is to know that someone on a street with as many residents.

      For the record, I live in S. Florida now (no election jokes please) but, ironically enough, I did once live in Boston.

      --
      Trouble making decisions? Just flip for it.
    30. Re:Demographics are not an invasion of privacy. by Mikey-San · · Score: 1

      Because a postal carrier can't look at a ZIP+4 code and say, "Oh, yeah, 52862-2354, that's Ms Dorkwad's house over at 4193 Dopey Avenue!" ;-)

      --
      Mikey-San
      Karma: +Eleventy billion (mostly affected by watching Celebrity Jeopardy)
    31. Re:Demographics are not an invasion of privacy. by aonifer · · Score: 1

      My zip+4 does resolve to my apartment. There is another zip+4 that resolves to the apartment building as a whole.

      As for why they include the address, I assume it's because postal carriers don't have an encyclopedic knowledge of every single zip+4 on their route.

    32. Re:Demographics are not an invasion of privacy. by aborchers · · Score: 1

      4193 Dopey Avenue == 12345-6789 doesn't seem too hard for a postal carrier. As I understand it, they have their own maps of the universe anyway which don't necessarily always correspond to our notions of names and numbers.

      Maybe the ultimate goal is to strip the address down to these sequences, and we're just preserving the rest for the luddites as it is. Seems like

      Personal Name
      Unit #
      Zip + 4

      ought to be enough in most cases, personal name only being necessary because people move but lots usually don't.

      --
      Trouble making decisions? Just flip for it.
    33. Re:Demographics are not an invasion of privacy. by wowbagger · · Score: 1
      No, I overgeneralized in order to focus on the point I was making, that "ZIP code covers large area, therefor you are safe" was false.

      I was trying to be brief and to the point.

      When people point out that it does not for everyone, you retract your statement, only to replace it by another one in which you no data.


      First, you sentance no verb.

      Second: No, it is called "Owning up to your mistakes" - somthing a troll won't do, but a polite person will.
    34. Re:Demographics are not an invasion of privacy. by rthille · · Score: 4, Funny

      Yeah, the trouble is that _everyone_ over generalizes.

      --
      Awesome furniture, accessories and cabinetry in Santa Rosa, CA: http://humanity-home.com/
    35. Re:Demographics are not an invasion of privacy. by wowbagger · · Score: 1

      Sure, and while I am at it, why don't I give you my SSN, my telephone number, and post my email in an easily scrapable format as well.

      Would you also like the root passwork to my firewall, its IP address, and my credit card numbers, as well?

    36. Re:Demographics are not an invasion of privacy. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      it does not ALWAYS resolve to a house, but it frequently DOES.

      s/frequently/rarely/

      Your case != most cases, dumbass.

    37. Re:Demographics are not an invasion of privacy. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Would you also like the root passwork to my firewall, its IP address, and my credit card numbers, as well?

      Well, since you are offering... ;)

    38. Re:Demographics are not an invasion of privacy. by rawdot · · Score: 1

      You can go here and type in a Zip+4 and get pretty darn close...

    39. Re:Demographics are not an invasion of privacy. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The apartment building that I lived in in Germany you would include your name and building number in the address, and the postman/woman would decide which mailbox in the building (out of a dozen or so) to put the mail in based on the name. Although at times it seemed like they just put anything within a few blocks with a USA return address into my mailbox...

    40. Re:Demographics are not an invasion of privacy. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Would you also like the root passwork to my firewall, its IP address, and my credit card numbers, as well?

      lol yes pls pls email 2 pr0nboy@hotmail.con thx

    41. Re:Demographics are not an invasion of privacy. by Zaphod+B · · Score: 2, Insightful

      It's a ZIP only. I don't even know my ZIP+4.

      --
      Zaphod B
      When duplication is outlawed, only outlaws will have /bin/cp
    42. Re:Demographics are not an invasion of privacy. by vrtladept · · Score: 1

      My Zip+4 resolves to a shared mailbox that 12 houses share .. pretty close!

    43. Re:Demographics are not an invasion of privacy. by Pieroxy · · Score: 1

      So if I follow you, rights are not violated for *most* people.

      That still leaves some with their rights violated!!

    44. Re:Demographics are not an invasion of privacy. by psxndc · · Score: 1
      Oh to leave Boston for greener (and sunnier pastures). Maybe I'll be that lucky someday...

      psxndc

      --

      The emacs religion: to be saved, control excess.

    45. Re:Demographics are not an invasion of privacy. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ZIP+4 more often resolves to a single house. It is primarily in densely populated areas (Boston and NYC, for example) where ZIP+4 is not so precise.

    46. Re:Demographics are not an invasion of privacy. by zapfie · · Score: 1

      It's sentence.

      Don't pick on other people's writing skills unless you're prepared to have the same done to you. :)

      --
      slashdot!=valid HTML
    47. Re:Demographics are not an invasion of privacy. by qtp · · Score: 1

      This one statement almost completely sums up most of what is wrong with the mentality of Slashdot.

      pot, kettle.

      kettle, pot.

      The problem exists not only on /., but in every public discourse that I have observed and/or participated in.

      that said:
      In actuality, the zip+4 frequently could resolve to a single house for most addresses in most zip codes. Accepting that most ZIPs in the US are rural or suburban and that there are many that contain fewer than 10,000 addresses, then this is not a difficult assumption. The question should be more one of whether protections (sort by ZIP, but not +4) should be implemented to protect the minority but significant case (those whose homes have thier own +4 suffix in thier ZIP).

      Personally, I see no reason that an actual abuse should be neccessary to ask (and expect) such protections. I'm sure that the persons who market demographic data disagree with me. (Their opinion is wrong.)

      --
      Read, L
    48. Re:Demographics are not an invasion of privacy. by Nightpaw · · Score: 1

      I can send a letter to my parents with just our lastname and their 5 digit zip. But they live in a small town and their postman was my brother's little league coach.

    49. Re:Demographics are not an invasion of privacy. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      At the current levels of TiVO market penetration (less than 1 million or so), it's probably a safe bet that the instersection of ZIP+4 with the set of TiVO subscribers allows for identifying the individual.

    50. Re:Demographics are not an invasion of privacy. by silas_moeckel · · Score: 1

      For me and most people at surburban/rural post offices it gets down to a house/person my +4 is my po box number so it's unique to the box.

      --
      No sir I dont like it.
    51. Re:Demographics are not an invasion of privacy. by bklock · · Score: 1

      Who cares about t he general case? If 99.999% of zip codes resolved to an entire state, but mine resolved to my couch, then everyone else might have their privacy, but I'd be selling my tivo asap.

    52. Re:Demographics are not an invasion of privacy. by Cunk · · Score: 1

      Guh? A zip code that pinpoints a specific house would eliminate such confusion. That was the previous poster's tongue-in-cheek point, I believe.

      --

      I am the inventor of the hilarious refrigerator alarm.
    53. Re:Demographics are not an invasion of privacy. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >How does this affect your privacy again?

      Perhaps he watches the gay channel...

    54. Re:Demographics are not an invasion of privacy. by Alyeska · · Score: 1
      Demographics aren't an invasion of privacy. They're an invasion of *decency*, at least in the way they're used....

      Through demographics, I can figure out how to link sex and alcohol in the mind of a 14-year-old forever. He'll pay my beer company a tax every time he gets laid (or even tries) for the rest of his life. I've convinced children that, if their parents don't buy them sugar-coated cereals, they should rebel. McDonalds and Disney are now mandates/entitlements. To deprive a child of McDisney consumerism is to deprive a human being of its soul (according to the marketing developed and successfully implemented over the years)

      Through demographics, the deBeers family now taxes Americans every time they get married -- "Why, I simply *must* have a diamond.... and it *must* be worth at least six or eight months' salary, because I'm expected to pay four months' salary" -- for an item that has no practical purpose and wasn't a part of our "culture" until the deBeers family made it so.

      "Wash. Rinse. Repeat." -- This is the kind of corporate ethics you want running the country?

    55. Re:Demographics are not an invasion of privacy. by Thing+1 · · Score: 1
      It's a ZIP only. I don't even know my ZIP+4.

      You can look up your ZIP+4 code here.

      Enjoy!

      --
      I feel fantastic, and I'm still alive.
    56. Re:Demographics are not an invasion of privacy. by CrazyTalk · · Score: 1

      Postage rate stability???? Are they kidding? How many times have our rates gone up over the past decade. Seems like the price of stamps goes up like clockwork every year or two. So much for the "efficiency" of the plus-4 system.

    57. Re:Demographics are not an invasion of privacy. by HTH+NE1 · · Score: 1

      Then why do people need to write the rest of my address on the envelope?

      Apart from it making the mail carrier's job a little easier not having to memorize the numbers for every home on his route, they don't. The rest of the address is redundant.

      Though ZIP+6 is even more accurate, and also in use.

      --
      Oh, say does that Star-Spangled Banner entwine / The myrtle of Venus with Bacchus's vine?
    58. Re:Demographics are not an invasion of privacy. by Zaphod+B · · Score: 1

      Why bother? It's not like it's going to improve my (incredibly bad) mail service by giving the guy yet another thing to think about in his badly-overloaded head.

      (We've gotten our mail at 21:30, and there are many, many days where we don't get it at all.)

      --
      Zaphod B
      When duplication is outlawed, only outlaws will have /bin/cp
  3. Wow by hawkbug · · Score: 0

    This is not good. I never planned on having large companies having access to my tv viewing habits. This angers me greatly. But, on the other hand - if it keeps Tivo in business, I guess I'd rather have them stay in business. But I sure would like to see some sort of opt-out feature here.

    1. Re:Wow by BilldaCat · · Score: 5, Funny

      news flash, einstein:

      NO ONE CARES ABOUT YOUR PARTICULAR VIEWING HABITS.

      take off your tin-foil hat now.

      --
      BilldaCat
    2. Re:Wow by cmallinson · · Score: 2, Insightful
      I never planned on having large companies having access to my tv viewing habits

      You didn't even read the summary, let alone the article. As long as they do not use any of your personal information, they are not invading your privacy. This is no more invasive than reading web server logfiles.

    3. Re:Wow by stevenbdjr · · Score: 1

      They don't have access to your TV viewing habits. They have access to your zip code's TV viewing habits, which happens to include you. This should hardly upset you, as it doesn't really concern you, as an individual.

    4. Re:Wow by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

      Then opt-out - Tivo has always been giving an option to do so. This entire story is a non-issue.

    5. Re:Wow by RollingThunder · · Score: 4, Funny

      Heck, less than that. Web server -statistics-, post amalgamating and tabulating.

      So they can tell that three thousand people in your zip code watched American Idol... they're not going to be able to conclusively proove *you* have no taste. ;)

    6. Re:Wow by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      hawkbug likes his privacy.

      he lives in colorado, but when to school in iowa. he only moved to colorado in the last 3 years to do *cough* ASP work for some tax software company. unfortunately he's not important enough to be on the company's "team members" database.

      here he is:

      http://www.fimble.com/staver/jen.jpg

      i think he's the one on the right. jen staver likes privacy, too:

      http://www.fimble.com/~frock/about.html

    7. Re:Wow by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The ability to opt out of tivo's data collection has always been there. Call tivo and tell them you wish to opt out. They have been collecting data since day one they just have never given out to anyone in the past.

    8. Re:Wow by bitmason · · Score: 2, Informative

      Actually there IS an opt-out feature.

    9. Re:Wow by rworne · · Score: 1

      Yes, but I have a feeling it will affect the resale value of my property. Can I get the homeowner's association to draft up some rules on viewing habits now?

      Sincerely,

      A Concerned NIMBY

      --
      I tried every decent and legal way I could think of to resolve the issue w/the business before I rented the chicken suit
    10. Re:Wow by blair1q · · Score: 1

      Right.

      You have 100 hours of archived Dr. Phil, and you don't think that's embarassing?

    11. Re:Wow by Le+Marteau · · Score: 1

      news flash, einstein:
      NO ONE CARES ABOUT YOUR PARTICULAR VIEWING HABITS.


      Just because no one cares about einstein's viewing habits does not mean this is a tin-foil subject. Lots of very rich people have TiVos. Lots of people in the entertainment industry. Lots of government officials (like Powell, the chief of the FCC). Lots of captains of industry. I would think their viewing habits (down to the exact key press on the remote) WOULD be of interest to certain individuals. With that level of detail on viewing habits (e.g. what scenes DOES he repeatedly re-view in his pron) a psychologist could come up with some VERY interesting insights.

      It's kind of like encryption. No one cares about what Joe Sixpack's emails are. But there are plenty of people who DO need privacy and DO need encryption and they DO NOT wear tin-foil hats.

      --
      Mod down people who tell people how to mod in their sigs
    12. Re:Wow by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Restrictions in privacy don't happen in quantum leaps. They happen in tip-toes. You give up something you don't care about, or something you figure no one will care about, only to find you've given up a lot more in progression from that first step.

      Besides, we have a government project now being planned (someone provide a link if they've read the news too) that literally wants to document everything in everyone's life. I could imagine steps like this helping out.

    13. Re:Wow by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No one cares?

      I sell tin foil hats so I do care.

    14. Re:Wow by hawkbug · · Score: 1

      You know what? You're wrong. I care, and I care that that information is being sent to people I don't know about.

    15. Re:Wow by Openadvocate · · Score: 1

      You have 100 hours of archived Dr. Phil, and you don't think that's embarassing?
      Naah, however, asking for a torrent file to download the lastest show would be.

      --
      my sig
    16. Re:Wow by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You know what? You're wrong. I care, and I care that that information is being sent to people I don't know about.

      So call Tivo and opt out you fuckwad.

    17. Re:Wow by hawkbug · · Score: 1

      Yes I did read the summary and the article. Yes, I realize that my personal information per se isn't being sent anywhere, but as a whole it is. It all comes back to how many people have tivo in my zipcode, and I bet it's not very many.

    18. Re:Wow by Aexia · · Score: 1

      No one cares about what Joe Sixpack's emails are.

      Until Joe Sixpack gets a divorce and his wife decides to bring up his predilection for writing NC-17 slashfic on mailing lists.

      But there are plenty of people who DO need privacy and DO need encryption and they DO NOT wear tin-foil hats.

      I think it's not a matter of whether everyone *needs* privacy because they do; the question is *when* you'll need it. Forsaking it now will spell trouble later on...

    19. Re:Wow by Mundocani · · Score: 1

      But this is John Ashcroft's America and, while I don't think I'm all that paranoid, I am uncomfortable with having my viewing habits exposed. I realize that they promise anonymity, but online shopping sites promise credit card security, and it used to be safe to check out subversive books from the library. We now know that that's not true anymore.

      Is there any danger that the government might eventually try to get at individual viewing habits because they're suspected of being up to no good? Could the shows you watch or the parts you replayed or paused on eventually be used against you? Before you answer that it couldn't happen, just remember that many of us used to think that about where we shopped or what books we read.

    20. Re:Wow by spoco2 · · Score: 1

      And you're wrong because it's not individual information! It's anonymous data! It's saying: "People in area X of age Z like Y shows".

      The Advertisers don't even care what one person watches. How is that going to benifit them financially? It's only of use in a rolled up sense.

      I used to work for a free ISP in Australia which collected surfing behaviour of users... but it was always anonymous... we couldn't say "Hey Fred, we notice you've been viewing a lot of porn lately... we might tell your wife"...

      This was because:

      a) Who cares

      &

      b) It only made sense for us to use general demographic/geographical information about people and target groups of people with certain characteristics/surfing habits. We never knew anything about individual people, but it meant that rather than people receiving blanket spam, they would receive marketing more relevent to their 'segment' (NOT them specifically, but rather to the group of people that they shared characteristics with). What happened? Well the response rates of those offers went up, the satisfaction went right up, people LIKED getting offers that were relevent (Think those Think Geek ads you see up there)...

      Stop being so damn paranoid. They don't care, it's not YOUR information about YOU that's being sent, it's anonymous statistics about trends and usage amongst GROUPS of people... get over yourself.

  4. Key word: aggregate by pmz · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Unless there's a ZIP code in Wyoming with only one person...I don't see any rights being trampled, here.

    1. Re:Key word: aggregate by ryants · · Score: 4, Funny
      Unless there's a ZIP code in Wyoming with only one person
      Insert "yo mamma so fat..." joke here.
      --

      Ryan T. Sammartino
      "Ancora imparo"

    2. Re:Key word: aggregate by BigBir3d · · Score: 1

      Unless sales of the quarterly report drop, and then the aggregate data is based on something other than zip code, say... street. And then address... and then household... and then individual box.

      There is nothing that says TiVo can't do something like that. Given the relatively slow adoption of the service, the lack of price decreases for the hardware, lack of a real advertising campaign (in CT where I live 45min from NYC), and diminishing competition, I see this sort of slippery slope cenario to be a valid possibility.

      In the end, TiVo cares more about staying in business then the happiness of some of its users.

    3. Re:Key word: aggregate by realdpk · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Doesn't it bode well that they've said they'd do something like this since oh, day one? That is, the selling of aggregate data?

      They've been very open with us on this issue. They've given no reason not to trust them.

    4. Re:Key word: aggregate by dreamt · · Score: 3, Funny

      Nothing other than their privacy policy. Doing demographics has _ALWAYS_ been included in Tivo's privacy policy, and you have _ALWAYS_ been able to opt out, if you want.

      Besides, as many people in the non /. world have said, why not view this as an oppoptunity to influence the market? Maybe enough people's habbits will kill these idiotic reality shows.

    5. Re:Key word: aggregate by BigBir3d · · Score: 1

      TiVo isn;'t big enough tp influence the life or death of a show. All it can provide is what ads work for TiVo owners (Britney Spears 2002 Super Bowl ad was a perfect example in the article).

      As to the policies of a company, they change. Some for the better, most for the worse :(

    6. Re:Key word: aggregate by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      *sigh*

      Well, you asked for it ...

      YO' MAMA IS SO FAT:

      Her high school graduation picture was an aerial photograph.
      Her driver's license says "Picture continued on other side."
      She has to iron her pants on the driveway.
      The back of her neck looks like a pack of hot dogs.
      Yo mama's so fat, all the restaurants in town have signs that say: "Maximum Occupancy: 240 Patrons OR Yo Mama"
      Yo mama's so fat, when she ran away, they had to use all four sides of the milk carton.
      Yo mama's so fat, instead of Levis 501 jeans, she wears Levi's 1002's.
      Yo mama's so fat, when she gets in an elevator, it HAS to go down.
      When she haul ass she gotta make two trips.
      When she dances she makes the band skip.
      When she was diagnosed with the flesh eating disease the doctor gave her 18 years to live.
      She put mayonnaise on aspirin.
      She jumped for joy and got stuck.
      She shows up on radar.
      She stood in front of the Hollywood sign and it just said H d.

      And my favorite:

      Yo mama's so fat, when she went to the beach Greenpeace tried to drag her ass back in the water.

    7. Re:Key word: aggregate by Gunzour · · Score: 4, Insightful

      TiVo isn;'t big enough tp influence the life or death of a show.

      I would argue that it is. With 700,000 households, it is 350 times larger than the highly influential Nielsen Media Research sample size. (See http://www.nielsenmedia.com/FAQ/)

    8. Re:Key word: aggregate by Thud457 · · Score: 1

      mmmmm, I can't wait for the first TiVirus !

      --

      the preceding comment is my own and in no way reflects the opinion of the Joint Chiefs of Staff

    9. Re:Key word: aggregate by hitchgoat · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Yah, but you can't use the information in the same way because you don't control the sample set. TiVo doesn't know I'm a single white male 20-something. Nielson is carefully chosen to be representative of the general public, or at least completely random. TiVo is probably more representative of the /. public.

    10. Re:Key word: aggregate by Jerf · · Score: 1

      There are statistical techniques for handling such things. Skewed populations can be handled. Size does matter. TiVo will certainly be able to provide a much finer-grained view of at least some (highly desirable!) demographics then Neilson can, even if it doesn't cover everything quite as well as Neilson.

      In fact, once everything is all set up and baselined with existing Nielson ratings, TiVo may well be vastly more useful, relegating Nielson to just a source of verification data.

    11. Re:Key word: aggregate by hitchgoat · · Score: 1

      Skewed populations can be handled if you know something about the skew, right? But they have almost no demographic data, other than address. I agree, though, that TiVo and such have excellent potential for improving ratings system.

    12. Re:Key word: aggregate by BigBir3d · · Score: 1

      Nielsen has decades of data to extrapolate(sp?) from, TiVo does not.

    13. Re:Key word: aggregate by Jerf · · Score: 1

      You can determine the skew empirically if you have other data to compare with. You can also correlate with known things about the ZIP code (how many yuppies live in 90210 vs. how many grandparents live in a retirement Florida zip), so if "15-30 male population" strongly correlates with how often a given show is recorded, you can guess with a certain probability that 15-30 males are watching that show, giving the advertisers the data they really want while keeping people's private information away from the advertisers.

      You certainly can't get everything but given what we already know about ZIPs and such there's a lot of useful data that can still be extracted... which is why the market puts a non-zero value on the data ;-)

    14. Re:Key word: aggregate by WEFUNK · · Score: 1

      TiVo users are probably more representative of the most attractive demographic segments - those with relatively high levels of disposable income and/or a propensity to spend their disposable income on expensive toys like TiVo. This, combined with the kind of fairly extensive macro demographic data that can be culled from the zip codes makes for very attractive viewership data for analysis (even if it is aggregate and mainly for a certain niche).

      --
      My next sig will be ready soon, but friends can beat the rush!
    15. Re:Key word: aggregate by qtp · · Score: 1

      Unless there's a ZIP code in Wyoming with only one person...I don't see any rights being trampled, here.

      I'd bet most people in Wyoming have thier own +4 suffix though.

      I don't know that there is a market for data that is sorted that finely (out side of the Intelligence Comunity).

      --
      Read, L
    16. Re:Key word: aggregate by ndogg · · Score: 1

      True, there is usually at least five people within a zip code in Wyoming.

      --
      // file: mice.h
      #include "frickin_lasers.h"
    17. Re:Key word: aggregate by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe enough people's habbits will kill these idiotic reality shows.

      Doh I am fairly sure that they actually tried using demographics BEFORE offering us the trash (whoops) "reality TV" ..... An old saying is Reality is for people that can't handle drugs.

    18. Re:Key word: aggregate by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The Nielsen FAQ is unclear. They talk about "hundreds of thousands" of Neilsen families,
      20,000 metered households, and 1.6 million diaries. Apparently, many households that are not metered contribute by keeping diaries of the shows they watch. So doing a simple calculation such as
      700,000 / 20,000 = 35 (not 350) doesn't give you a meaningful result. You could argue that the Neilsen and TiVo groups are comparable in size, but that's about as far as you can go.

      The value of historical data is questionable as tastes change over time and fads come and go. But there is probably some value to such data, so in this case Neilsen has an advantage, though perhaps a small one.

    19. Re:Key word: aggregate by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
  5. Not a problem by Zirnike · · Score: 5, Insightful
    "in aggregate form"

    Nothing to see here. Move along.

    Aggregate data is fine, for the most part (obviously, if your consumer base is 5 people, there might be an issue), but for this, I don't see the problem. And I'm a serious privacy advocate...

    --
    I'm not shy, I'm stalking my prey
    1. Re:Not a problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      define aggregate plz

    2. Re:Not a problem by aborchers · · Score: 1

      Aggregate data is fine, for the most part (obviously, if your consumer base is 5 people, there might be an issue)

      No issue there either because, in practice, noone will ever buy a demographic for 5 people.

      --
      Trouble making decisions? Just flip for it.
    3. Re:Not a problem by hesiod · · Score: 1

      > define aggregate plz

      Sand, gravel, crushed stone and quarried rock used for construction purposes.
      http://www.em.gov.bc.ca/Mining/MiningSt ats/Aggrega te%20BMP%20Handbook/Chapters/A-1_Glossary.pdf

      Although this is probably what you want:
      aggregate

      In general, to aggregate (verb, from Latin aggregare meaning to add to) is to collect things together. An aggregate (adjective) thing is a collection of other things. An aggregation is a collection.

      http://whatis.techtarget.com/definition/0,,sid9_ gc i214504,00.html

    4. Re:Not a problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      No issue there either because, in practice, noone will ever buy a demographic for 5 people.

      I would if you let me pick the people!

    5. Re:Not a problem by RevDobbs · · Score: 1

      ... and this just in: lots of people in San Francisco like "Will & Grace". Go figure.

  6. Nothing to see... Move along. by TedTschopp · · Score: 5, Insightful

    To me this doesn't seem like a big deal. This type of information is a marketing pleb's dream. And it looks like information about you personally would not be viewable. Aggregate is the way we as privacy experts should be pushing as a compromise. This is no big deal. And as someone who has seen how this aggregate data is used with GIS software. Again, I say... Nothing to see, move along. Ted Tschopp

    --
    Fantasy remains a human right; we make in our measure and in our derivative mode... -- JRR Tolkien
    1. Re:Nothing to see... Move along. by TopShelf · · Score: 1

      Oh come on, what are you trying to do, rain on a good /. anti-corporate parade here? Just count the "Tivo sold out, the bastards!" posts that come along...

      --
      Stop by my site where I write about ERP systems & more
    2. Re:Nothing to see... Move along. by xyote · · Score: 1

      Aggregate is not a huge protection. Remember those anonymous opinion surveys where they would aggregate by department but you knew you couldn't answer certain questions because your boss would damn well know who that 1 answer came from. There's a huge amount of information they can infer from viewing patterns, i.e. age, interests, etc... Correlating that with information from other databases, they can narrow things down considerably. And that's what they want to do. The more specific the marketing data, the more valuable it is to marketers. There have already been criticism about social security data being released in aggregate form for the very same reasons.

    3. Re:Nothing to see... Move along. by rworne · · Score: 1

      Inference and aggregation are two big problems with database security.

      Another possible use/misuse of this info:

      Assume 10 years from now, satellite and digital cable become commonplace, and PVR functionality is built into the decoder boxes. Tivo is also alive and well.

      Suddenly an Amber alert is released in a nearby community and a little girl turns up missing. The police then demand records from the PVR companies on a fishing expedition to find possible suspects... and you watched Kubrick's Lolita last week.

      --
      I tried every decent and legal way I could think of to resolve the issue w/the business before I rented the chicken suit
    4. Re:Nothing to see... Move along. by TedTschopp · · Score: 1

      I understand your position and I think the country we live in today is more likly to do what you mention, but your argument suffers from being a Slippery Slope.

      If we are going to want someone or something like the government to do somehting we need to start to appeal to logical understandable arguments which would hold up to a decent level of scrutiny. Becuase in the end it might have to in a court of law.

      I mean come on, if as geeks/computer programmers we demand good code, can't we demand good thinking and good logic minus all the hysteria.

      Ted Tschopp

      --
      Fantasy remains a human right; we make in our measure and in our derivative mode... -- JRR Tolkien
    5. Re:Nothing to see... Move along. by TedTschopp · · Score: 1

      I've said this before, if we as geeks/computer programmers we demand good code, can't we demand good thinking and good logic minus all the hysteria. Come on guys what do you think? Ted Tschopp

      --
      Fantasy remains a human right; we make in our measure and in our derivative mode... -- JRR Tolkien
    6. Re:Nothing to see... Move along. by rworne · · Score: 1

      Yes, I'm only giving an example. However, I do believe if the info is there it will be used or abused for all of our "common good".

      If marketing would love to pry into our viewing habits, so would big government keeping tabs on citizens and law enforcement looking for leads.

      "They" already want to know what books you read, why wouldn't they want to know what shows you watch as well?

      --
      I tried every decent and legal way I could think of to resolve the issue w/the business before I rented the chicken suit
  7. pr0n by Jukeb0x · · Score: 5, Funny

    Finally they might give me the pr0n-commercials and ads I've been waiting for!

    1. Re:pr0n by Surak · · Score: 1

      Yeah! I personally can't *wait* for those penis enlargement ads and the ads that say I can work from home and make big $$$! w00t! I'm gonna only an hour a day, be independently wealthy, AND have 13 inches! I'll be a babe magnet for sure!

      Where do I sign up for TiVO?

    2. Re:pr0n by PD · · Score: 1

      I don't care what they give us, as long as I never have to watch another goddamn BowFlex ad on TV.

    3. Re:pr0n by TheFlyingGoat · · Score: 1

      You do know that your TV has multiple channels, correct? It even comes with a power button! :)

      --
      You have enemies? Good. That means you've stood up for something, sometime in your life. --Winston Churchill
    4. Re:pr0n by Surak · · Score: 1

      Holy fsck! You mean I can TURN IT OFF and do something more intellectually stimulating like reading Slashd....err...never mind. ;)

    5. Re:pr0n by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      d00d
      how in the hell are you going to meet babes working out of your house?

  8. Hasn't this happened before? by icemax · · Score: 5, Informative

    Seems like this has been going on since the beginning

    --


    __________
    Love conquers all... except CANCER
  9. Oh Crap!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Better cancel all those furry related programs on my to do list.

  10. I wish I could say I was surprised.... by berniecase · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I wish I could say I was surprised, but I'm not. So they're going to sell this information to other people, but I'd like to see it for myself, too. I'd like to know just what they're tracking and how the reports look for the ad agencies buying this stuff.

    I wonder if TiVo includes any data like "we know that such-and-such in this zip code makes between 40,000-80,000 a year and has 2.3 kids, etc."

    Is there an opt-out feature? Can I keep the anonymous data from getting to TiVo the first place (apart from unplugging the unit)?

    1. Re:I wish I could say I was surprised.... by realdpk · · Score: 4, Insightful

      How would TiVo know you make between 40,000 and 80,000 a year?

      TiVo knows that I make more than $155.88/year, but I haven't given them an indication of how much more.

      And yes, there's an opt out feature in the TiVo, so you can have your viewing statistics removed from your zip code. Big win for privacy. ;) Just don't complain when your local station uses the info and decides to cancel your favorite three-thumbs-up show. ;)

    2. Re:I wish I could say I was surprised.... by jgerry · · Score: 4, Insightful

      So they're going to sell this information to other people, but I'd like to see it for myself, too.

      I'm sure lots of us would like to see that data, but if they made it available to us for free, that would kinda negate the possibility of them SELLING the data for $$$, you know? Contact Tivo and I'm sure they'll get together a quote for you and you could purchase the data too.

      Is there an opt-out feature?

      Yes, you can call Tivo and opt-out, should you choose. It's quick and hassle free, I know lots of other Tivo owners who have done that.

      Personally, I haven't opted out. I've seen the data that is sent to Tivo, it can't be tracked to me individually, and I'd like Tivo to be able to make a buck so they don't go out of business.

      Really folks, this isn't a paranoid, tinfoil hat issue. It's just business, and Tivo's model seems far more ethical than most. I'm more than happy to help them out. It doesn't cost me anything.

    3. Re:I wish I could say I was surprised.... by camusflage · · Score: 2, Informative

      I wonder if TiVo includes any data like "we know that such-and-such in this zip code makes between 40,000-80,000 a year and has 2.3 kids, etc."

      That's where ACORN cluster data comes in handy...

      --
      The truth about Scientology, Xenu, and you: Operation Clambake
    4. Re:I wish I could say I was surprised.... by Erasmus+Darwin · · Score: 2, Interesting
      "Is there an opt-out feature? Can I keep the anonymous data from getting to TiVo the first place (apart from unplugging the unit)?"

      Other people have already mentioned that you can opt-out by calling TiVo. What they haven't mentioned is that when you do so, your TiVo stops uploading the viewing data altogether. I think there was some technical/debugging logs that might've still been sent though. It's been awhile since I've read up on it, but you can probably find more information on one of the TiVo hacking forums.

    5. Re:I wish I could say I was surprised.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I've seen the data that is sent to Tivo, it can't be tracked to me individually

      That's a silly thing to say. Why would you think it couldn't be tracked to you individually? When it sends that data to Tivo, it says "here's the data for Account #8932341", right?

    6. Re:I wish I could say I was surprised.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He's not talking about all the data. Just the data retrieved from his box. I would think that that would be reasonable.

    7. Re:I wish I could say I was surprised.... by Servo · · Score: 1

      your TiVo stops uploading the viewing data altogether

      And I assume you mean this is bad, because I also assume it is this data that provides the recommended viewing?

      --
      A slip of the foot you may soon recover, but a slip of the tongue you may never get over. -Benjamin Franklin
    8. Re:I wish I could say I was surprised.... by dreamt · · Score: 1
      Just don't complain when your local station uses the info and decides to cancel your favorite three-thumbs-up show. ;)

      I wish I could give a big three-thumbs up to this comment...

    9. Re:I wish I could say I was surprised.... by duggy_92127 · · Score: 1
      TiVo knows that I make more than $155.88/year, but I haven't given them an indication of how much more.

      Actually, you do give them your ZIP code, which could be used to infer property value and, thus, mortgage and property taxes in a rough way. And you also give them which cable line-up you have, which they can correlate directly to how much you pay for cable, which may give them an indication of your disposable income. With those two factors cross-referenced, I'm sure they could place most of their subscribers accurately withing a $20k range.

      That being said, I worry not about the info in this particular article. I thought they were already doing this.

      Doug

    10. Re:I wish I could say I was surprised.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't know about the zipcode you live in, but land and house costs in Milwaukee county range from $25000 up to over $1million (lakefront homes). Even in a single zipcode, you're looking at some homes in the $140,000 range and some in the $500000 range. That's too big to run marketing numbers off of.

      The way I see it, this will help keep the shows I actually watch on TV, and weed out the crappy shows and commercials. Who cares if they know that people in my area code tend to watch a lot of Packer games and average $38,000 / year?

    11. Re:I wish I could say I was surprised.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      For the most part, the US is very economically segregated and zipcodes are a highly reliable way to infer income and social class. Almost all marketing except for TV/Radio is zipcode-based.

      (The exceptions are usually older urban areas where there's more economic diversity, old money, and gentrification going on.)

    12. Re:I wish I could say I was surprised.... by Erasmus+Darwin · · Score: 1
      Nope. Recommended viewing is handled entirely client-side. Furthermore, your actual thumbs-up/thumbs-down choices aren't uploaded -- just what you watch.

      In short, disabling data collection will have no visible impact on your service. The only drawbacks are that TiVo makes less money (which could indirectly lead to their bankruptcy or an increase in rates) and TV stations don't know what you watch (which could indirectly lead to shows you like being cancelled).

    13. Re:I wish I could say I was surprised.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Want to see for yourself?

      If your Tivo is connecting to TivoHQ over broadband, sniff the packets during the data exchange.

      If your Tivo is connecting directly, login to a shell prompt, and snoop on the data exchange.

      It's already been done, and the individual who did it says the viewing data is completely decoupled from any subscriber id data.

      I haven't checked, but I'm sure the instructions for how to do it are available online, or ask in the Tivo forums.

    14. Re:I wish I could say I was surprised.... by Zathrus · · Score: 1

      I wish I could say I was surprised, but I'm not.

      Good thing... since this has been known since day 1 and is fairly obvious in their EULA.

      I'd like to see it for myself, too. I'd like to know just what they're tracking

      So go to the TiVo Forums, look in the Underground, and find the references to what TiVo is uploading. It's all done completely confidentially - the viewing information is sent as a separate log file, is not sent at all if you opt-out, and contains no personally identifying information (yeah, there's the TiVo service number that's inherent in the transaction, but TiVo has stated that it is not stored with the aggregate data. Individuals who have worked for TiVo have said the same thing too).

      how the reports look for the ad agencies buying this stuff

      Then I suggest that you either get a job at an ad agency, get a friend at one, or become one yourself... that's what they're selling you know. Giving it away for free defeats the purpose.

      I wonder if TiVo includes any data like

      No, but other geographic databases do. Any ad agency worth its fee will have a bunch of these and tie the data together appropriately.

      Is there an opt-out feature?

      Yes. As I recall, it's even in the EULA which you didn't even glance at.

    15. Re:I wish I could say I was surprised.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      zipcodes are a highly reliable way to infer income and social class
      Even in your parent poster's example of Milwaukee. With a little bit of local knowledge, you can make a pretty reliable guess that someone who lives in, say, 53217 (Fox Point, River Hills, Bayside) is pretty darn wealthy. This is probably true in most cities. Heck, the Milwaukee city government actually publishes a purchasing power profile for the county, broken down by ZIP code.
      The only real exceptions in Milwaukee are related to the lake and some new development near downtown. ZIP+4 would certainly take care of those. Also remember that any large-scale marketing effort is bound to mis-target a LOT of people.

  11. Audience Measuring Tool by jmays · · Score: 1

    And at the same time they release this.

    --
    KARMA TAG! You're it.
  12. Weren't they already doing this? by ivan256 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I thought they had planned to do this all along.

    Either way, it's yet another reason to buy a TiVo instead of building your own (yes, I wrote that correctly). If you're using a TiVo companies will be paying attention to what you watch and potentially using the info to determine what to put on in the future. Build your own and they won't.

    1. Re:Weren't they already doing this? by Poofat · · Score: 1

      "If you're using a TiVo companies will be paying attention to what you watch and potentially using the info to determine what to put on in the future."

      Thats a good idea in theory, but with the sketchy ratings data they have already, we get atrocities like American Idol and Joe Millionaire

    2. Re:Weren't they already doing this? by ivan256 · · Score: 1

      we get atrocities like American Idol and Joe Millionaire

      You know, they make shows for many types of viewers. You can't expect *all* the shows to be made for your tastes. At least nobody's forcing you to actually watch Joe Millionaire. For now at least...

    3. Re:Weren't they already doing this? by detritus. · · Score: 1

      Good point. However, I would assume most people who would build their own need a TV listing data stream as well. I'm sure that determined people have found a way to do this (parsing/extracting data from existing websites, etc..) but I would think there is a potential business model here -- provide TV listings and whatnot in a XML stream, provide API's (free/open source?) to developers who wish to utilize it, and a free data service to the general public in exchange for submitting viewing habits and other marketable data back to the provider, which can in turn sell it like Tivo is doing.

      I, for one, would gladly make use of the service.

    4. Re:Weren't they already doing this? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    5. Re:Weren't they already doing this? by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      Yes, but we can expect SOME of the shows to be made for our tastes.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    6. Re:Weren't they already doing this? by irc.goatse.cx+troll · · Score: 1

      "At least nobody's forcing you to actually watch Joe Millionaire."

      They are in a way. When they cancle our favorite shows (Eg, Dark Angel) and replace them with mindless filth (Eg, anything being promoted heavily on network tv currently) they arnt exactly leaving us with much choice.

      Of course, you can still opt out of it all like most of us do.

      --
      Pain lasts, kid. Its how you know you're alive. Sometimes I think this growing up thing is just pain management-TheMaxx
    7. Re:Weren't they already doing this? by ryanwright · · Score: 1

      Yes, but we can expect SOME of the shows to be made for our tastes.

      They've had Britney on MTV for some time now. Not to mention all those cola ads. What more do you want?!

      --
      -Ryan, with the unoriginal sig
    8. Re:Weren't they already doing this? by Ctrl-Z · · Score: 1


      I don't really know much about this, but would something like XMLTV be what you are looking for?

      --
      www.timcoleman.com is a total waste of your time. Never go there.
  13. Opt Out Option by sweeney37 · · Score: 5, Informative

    You can Opt-Out of the Marketing data collection by calling Customer Care (877-For-TiVo)

    Mike

    1. Re:Opt Out Option by FreeLinux · · Score: 1

      That's true, and it is better than nothing. But, wouldn't it be a lot nicer if all of these companies that sell/share your data had an Opt-In policy instead. That way, maybe, your data could be private by default rather than having to call and send letters to all these different organizations in order to "Opt-Out"

    2. Re:Opt Out Option by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ha! Sucker! That number automatically adds you to the list of people that have something to hide! Terrorist!

    3. Re:Opt Out Option by pashdown · · Score: 0, Offtopic
      After TiVo sold their DirecTivo unit to DirecTV, I received a letter from them regarding their new and improved privacy policy. It stated that I had to opt-out to DTV if I didn't want my viewing data collected. This in spite of the fact that I had already done so with TiVo Corp.

      I called the number on the DTV letter to opt-out and was told that I needed to call another number. I called the other number, and was told that I needed to provide written notice. I wrote the written notice and asked for confirmation, which I never received.

      In addition, the boolean variable in the TiVo software that controlled whether data was uploaded mysteriously disappeared after the box got the DTV update. This means that not only does the DTV software not have the facility for stopping the upload, but DTV has no control over whether it happens or not. It always happens.

      Draw your own conclusions. I'm glad I've got TiVo net so I can copy a choice JPEG over my logfile to upload to those lying bastards on a nightly basis.

    4. Re:Opt Out Option by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yep, this works.

      I called the number. They asked me a few questions about my lifestyle and for my zipcode and then took me right off the data collection list.

      P.S. The phone number is not toll free.

    5. Re:Opt Out Option by hesiod · · Score: 1

      > wouldn't it be a lot nicer if all of these companies [...] had an Opt-In policy

      That is a good idea for privacy, but to be realistic, most people don't give a hoot for their privacy (or lack thereof) on something as benign as viewing habits. That means that very few (if any) people would opt-in or even know how to, not making it worth their time to insert that data collecting "feature."

    6. Re:Opt Out Option by anthony_dipierro · · Score: 1

      But, wouldn't it be a lot nicer if all of these companies that sell/share your data had an Opt-In policy instead.

      No way. With opt-out I get to keep my information private, while the company still makes money off the other 99% of people who don't opt out.

      Now if only slashdot advertising were opt-out...

    7. Re:Opt Out Option by mattrix2k · · Score: 1

      if only slashdot advertising were opt-out

      It is.

    8. Re:Opt Out Option by mattrix2k · · Score: 1

      Questions about your lifestyle? Hmmm

    9. Re:Opt Out Option by anthony_dipierro · · Score: 1

      No it isn't. You can pay to have them stop sending you crap. That's not opt-out.

  14. Electronic Privacy who cares? by Pilo · · Score: 1

    Indivudually your viewing habbits are worth nothing to the company that buys the information. The only thing that they care about is "what is the most viewed show?" Why would a company look and see: ooohhh John is watching Survivor, we should have a comercial then. We're not talking about credit card information here, i don't like what an outcry privacy advocates are making over the small stuff like this.

    1. Re:Electronic Privacy who cares? by geekoid · · Score: 1

      How about:
      John watched a show on computer hacking, perhaps we should run a cross incdex to see what books he purchased.
      Whats that? he purchased a computer security book? we better flag that guy.

      In a world where we finger print children so they can eat lunch, I don't really trust anybody to hold out against the FBI for a warant. Instead I expect they'll turn over the information just to 'cooperate'.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
  15. Last I checked... by Kjella · · Score: 2, Insightful

    ...the TV ratings (those Nieslen boxes) were divided by various zones as well. Perhaps not quite as finemasked as this, but I really don't see much of a privacy issue here. As long as they don't start selling subscription data for direct marketing, I wouldn't mind.

    Kjella

    --
    Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
    1. Re:Last I checked... by PetWolverine · · Score: 1

      Most people are looking for intelligent life in space. I haven't given up Earth yet.

      "And pray that there's intelligent life somewhere up in space, 'cause there's bugger all down here on Earth." --Monty Python

      --
      I found the meaning of life the other day, but I had write-only access.
  16. No real news here by cmeans · · Score: 2, Insightful
    TiVo always indicated that they might do this. You agree to it in the EULA/Terms of Service. I'm glad they've got another option for a revenue stream, especially as it could mean a slight improvement in AD quality.

  17. This is a Good Thing.... by Giant+Ape+Skeleton · · Score: 1, Funny
    I work in a pet store and we are always in need of paper to line the Chinchilla corrals etc.

    The more junk mail we get, the better -- we can line all the cages and not feel guilty about wasting paper!

    And why do we have Tivo in the store?

    Animal Planet, baby!!! :-)

    --
    The difference between stupidity and genius is that genius has its limits.
    1. Re:This is a Good Thing.... by SomeOtherGuy · · Score: 1

      work in a pet store and we are always in need of paper to line the Chinchilla corrals etc.

      Chinchilla's deserve sawdust and at the very least straw. What kind of animal are you to let them live in/on paper. :)

      --
      (+1 Funny) only if I laugh out loud.
    2. Re:This is a Good Thing.... by Giant+Ape+Skeleton · · Score: 1
      What kind of animal are you to let them live in/on paper

      Hey, c'mon! at least it gives them something to read while they are going to the bathroom!

      --
      The difference between stupidity and genius is that genius has its limits.
  18. odd by jtdennis · · Score: 1

    I could have sworn that TiVo did this already. I can only see it as a good thing though especially since some of my favorite new shows (John Doe) were canceled and reality crap is still going strong. TiVo doing this is a good alternative to nielson ratings IMHO.

    --
    -- "Freedom is the right of all sentient beings" -Optimus Prime
    1. Re:odd by Sexy+Commando · · Score: 1

      John Doe canceled? I thought it was season finale...

    2. Re:odd by jtdennis · · Score: 1

      http://www.pazsaz.com/cancel.html has a list of a ton of canceled shows...John Doe included. I hope some other network picks it up, it was getting really good.

      --
      -- "Freedom is the right of all sentient beings" -Optimus Prime
  19. OK this is not terrible... by graveyhead · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I hope the networks (in addition to the advertisers which will of course snap it up... thank god for keyword 'aggregate') will look at this data as well. I have always thought that I effectively have a Nielson box sitting under my TV, so why shouldn't they take advantage of it? Maybe Firefly would still be on the air with statistics from our Tivo boxes...

    --
    std::disclaimer<std::legalese> sig=new std::disclaimer; sig->dump(); delete sig;
    1. Re:OK this is not terrible... by Sloppy · · Score: 1
      Maybe Firefly would still be on the air with statistics from our Tivo boxes...
      Or, conversely, maybe Firefly would have been cancelled after the first episode, because advertisers would have learned that everyone fast-forwards through ads.

      But, while no Tivo users watched "[insert name of crappy/insulting show]", a lot of Nielson people did, and they watched the ads, so let's advertise on "[insert name of crappy/insulting show]" and let them have our money instead of Firefly.

      In the words of Commander Sinclair: "Never give anyone a gun unless you know where they're going to point it."

      --
      As copyright owner of this comment, I authorize everyone to defeat any technological measure which limits access to it.
  20. Watch out Big Brother is watching! by Hogwash+McFly · · Score: 1

    When people cry over the spilt milk that is privacy invasion, I often wonder why they make such a fuss. If a company is selling data about thousands or millions of its customers to a third party, individuality is lost as the advertisers etc. want data in bulk.

    I wouldn't care if my viewing details were whizzed off to some number crunching machine somewhere because at the end of the day I have nothing to hide (although if, hypothetically of course, I were watching too much Will and Grace I might be keeping something in the closet, as it were)

    --
    Mother, do you think they'll like this sig?
    1. Re:Watch out Big Brother is watching! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Watch out, Big Brother is watching you to see if you're watching "Big Brother"!

    2. Re:Watch out Big Brother is watching! by geekoid · · Score: 1

      one any individule purchse, you are correct.
      Unfortunatly these thing have a tendencie to spider web. People linking databases, turning over info to the government without warrant, etc . . .
      If it is by 5 digit zip, and that is, no prob. But if it is finer then that, expect to get phone calls from people selling crap targetted at your TV viewing demographic.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
  21. oh great by Lxy · · Score: 4, Funny

    Now mass marketers will think I'm Gay.

    --

    There is no reasonable defense against an idiot with an agenda
    :wq
    1. Re:oh great by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Everyone already thinks you're gay.

    2. Re:oh great by Lxy · · Score: 1

      Everyone already thinks you're gay.

      That's what Jr. High does to a person :-(

      --

      There is no reasonable defense against an idiot with an agenda
      :wq
  22. Funny hack opportunities by Big+Toe · · Score: 5, Funny

    Imagine if you could change the information sent to Tivo so the advertisers thought young teenagers watched "The 700 Club" and retired senior citizens watched MTV. Soon Depends undergarments will advertise during TRL and Trojan condoms will be blasting its ads to conservative republicans. That would be dope.

    1. Re:Funny hack opportunities by hesiod · · Score: 1

      > young teenagers watched "The 700 Club" and retired senior citizens watched MTV

      Well, after the "MTV Generation" gets old enough, that may happen.

      > That would be dope

      That would be cool... dope. Yep.

  23. And if this bothers you... by johnnick · · Score: 2, Funny

    Just set your box to record lots of stuff that you want "THEM" to think you watch during the night or when you're not at home and there's nothing else that you care about. That way, your pr0n habits will seem like more of a statistical aberration.

    John

    --
    "The plural of anecdote is not data."
    1. Re:And if this bothers you... by indros · · Score: 1

      But they can do the second-by-second analysis. So if you don't watch, they know. If you skip commercials, they know.

      Personally, I don't care if they have this info, as long as I don't start getting more crap mail.

    2. Re:And if this bothers you... by johnnick · · Score: 1

      Just because the tv (and TiVo) is on, doesn't mean I'm watching. :-)

      John

      --
      "The plural of anecdote is not data."
  24. tivo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Funny


    I cannot post this as anything other than an AC.

    I was a TiVo engineer back in the 90's.

    In early 1999, TiVo started to include a specialized signal in the colour synchronization signal of their programming guide. This signal, when downconverted to VLF (Very Low Frequency) audio are proven to be subliminal messages.

    Messages such as "Flush the toilet" were tested. Our sources at various city waterworks confirmed that water consumption spiked dramatically when this test message was played.

    In November or December of 1999 some of the test messages promoted purchasing, just in time for the holiday gift season. Records from the time will show an above average sales season.

    Then in May 2000, after all the Y2K nonsense had gone away, a disgruntled engineer locked the system into a continuous loop. We've been unable to break into the system yet to disable the message. However, the message says "Go to Goatse.cx . Being that slashdot has a higher than normal amount of TiVo users, it comes as no suprise that this link is commonplace.

    Do not succumb to goatse.cx! You have been programmed

    1. Re:tivo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      programmed by who? i definitely hope that i am open source

  25. Not a big deal. by brooks_talley · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Am I the only one who thinks that the extreme "privacy" fringe is doing a lot to discredit legitimate privacy concerns.

    I care if Tivo sells a list of the programs to watch to a local advertiser who will then call me on the phone, bang on my door, or spam me with "special offers just for me." Tivo, in that case, is attempting to act as a middleman in setting up a business relationship that I have no interest in.

    I do not care if Tivo sells data about how many people in California, or even my ZIP code, watched Buffy last night.

    Now, there are issues with privacy policies; if Tivo has said that they wouldn't do this and then have, they've lied to their customers, and even the most paranoid privacy freak has a right to expect companies to live up their word.

    But really, there are enough *very* significant privacy issues today that relate to *government* spying on *individuals* with no probably cause, warrant, etc.

    I'm not at all sure that groups, such as "everyone who lives in my ZIP code" are, or should be, entitled to the same level of privacy protection that individuals deserve.

    I mean, if I go down to the street corner and count how many people push the "push to cross" button and then sell that data to the people who make "push to cross" buttons, am I somehow violating peoples' privacy? If I do it in 10 cities? 100? Does it matter if I'm incorporated and have employees or not?

    I'm willing to hear the other side, and I certainly subscribe to the slippery-slope argument, but for the most part I think this kind of corporate aggregation of data is at most a very minor concern in a world filled with huge privacy issues.

    Cheers
    -b

    1. Re:Not a big deal. by Rick.C · · Score: 1
      I mean, if I go down to the street corner and count how many people push the "push to cross" button and then sell that data to the people who make "push to cross" buttons, am I somehow violating peoples' privacy?

      As long as you're just counting, no problem, but if you take each person's picture or lift their thumbprint with a piece of tape after each press, then it's an issue.

      If TiVo keeps any personal data, that's a bad thing. As someone else noted, if the data is in a database, whether TiVo planned to use it is irrelevant to a bankruptcy court. It's an asset to be sold.
      --
      You were 80% angel, 10% demon. The rest was hard to explain. - Over The Rhine
      "Math in a song is good."-Linford
    2. Re:Not a big deal. by geekoid · · Score: 1

      "I mean, if I go down to the street corner and count how many people push the "push to cross" button and then sell that data to the people who make "push to cross" buttons, am I somehow violating peoples' privacy?"

      no, but if you keep that person private information, like say, finger print, then yes. You are tracking that persons movements. The size or legal definition of your business is irrelevant.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    3. Re:Not a big deal. by brooks_talley · · Score: 1

      As per my post and the original topic, I was talking about watching a bunch of people and selling aggregate data. As I said, if Tivo sold my personal info, I'd be pissed. If they sell info about aggregate viewing habits that I'm included in, it's not a big deal and not an invasion of privacy.

      -b

    4. Re:Not a big deal. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I consider myself one of the extreme members of the privacy movement because I value my privacy more than I value my so-called relationship with some business.

      I absolutely believe that I should have to OPT-IN to anything which is going to even remotely utilize any information regarding me whatsoever. The company should have to sign a contract with me, remunerate me somehow, and be subject to civil and criminal penalties for utilizing that information other than specified in the contract. I should have the right to revoke the utilization of the information at anytime, for any reason, including "no reason" - and that's it.

      Aggregating data is a smoke screen. If the sample size is small enough, an aggregate sample resolves to a small set of persons - and it's then trivial to identify the individuals. That information can then be misused by any number of entities (persons, corporate, governmental, religious, etc.).

      I watch TV to shut down the ole brain for a brief period of time - not to provide marketing data for some company. And especially when I'm PAYING to watch the damn program in the first place, and PAYING for the Tivo "service", and PAYING for the electricity to drive these wonderful devices, and PAYING for the taxes and the mortgage on the domicile. Fuck them - they want MY info, they can PAY ME for it.

      I was considering buying a TIVO, but I think I'll build one instead - pretty much the functionality that I need, but gee - no service fee, and no data captures that I have to worry about...

  26. Cool with me. by Schezar · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I want the ad moguls and networks to know what I watch, because they might just notice that my viewing habits, like those of many people, are nothing like what they believe them to be.

    I don't watch ads. Period. I watch a few good shows, and I ignore the rest.

    On a larger scale, my dream would be for the entire system of free-but-with-forced-ad-watching television to fall to pieces. Sure, it might mean the end of television as mass-media, but it would also force a lot of mouth-breathers to do something other than watch TV every night.

    Of course, I'm pretty tired right now, so make what you will of the preceding. ^_~

    --
    GeekNights!
    Late Night Radio for Geeks!
    1. Re:Cool with me. by MadCow42 · · Score: 1

      >>I don't watch ads. Period.

      Then they don't give a flying F*#K about what you watch. Period.

      MadCow.

      --
      I used to have a sig, but I set it free and it never came back.
    2. Re:Cool with me. by YrWrstNtmr · · Score: 1

      I want the ad moguls and networks to know what I watch, because they might just notice that my viewing habits, like those of many people, are nothing like what they believe them to be.
      I don't watch ads. Period.


      Then you are not on their radar, except as to drum up support for more devious ad insertions and product placement.

      You are the product. The advertisers are the customers.

    3. Re:Cool with me. by geekoid · · Score: 1

      If you don't watch any advertiing at all, then how do you know when a new show is on?

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    4. Re:Cool with me. by gl4ss · · Score: 1

      the decision made from that data would be: f*** this, those soccer moms shows are much cheaper to make and they watch ads.

      --
      world was created 5 seconds before this post as it is.
    5. Re:Cool with me. by Enigma2175 · · Score: 1

      f you don't watch any advertiing at all, then how do you know when a new show is on?

      My Tivo records it for me as a suggestion :)

      --

      Enigma

  27. Kickback? by codefool · · Score: 1
    The way I see it, if I'm paying for the programming information so I can use the TiVo, and TiVo collects my viewing statistics for sale (which in the aggregate I also pay for), then I'm due a payback (reimbursement?).

    IOW - I'm paying TiVo for the privalege of giving them valuable market information that they sell for almost pure profit.

    Am I missing something?

    --
    "Stop whining!" - Arnold, as Mr. Kimble
    1. Re:Kickback? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are a moron. The data is part of what you're paying TiVo (though they are nice enough to stop collecting it if you ask). Without alternate revenue streams, you'd be looking at increased subscription costs or TiVo having a hard time making enought cash.

    2. Re:Kickback? by Erasmus+Darwin · · Score: 1
      "Am I missing something?"

      Well, you're missing the fact that TiVo isn't exactly raking in the cash to begin with. Selling anonymous viewing data might be the thing to get them in the black without having to resort to raising prices.

    3. Re:Kickback? by mjmalone · · Score: 3, Interesting

      The reason TiVo subscriptions are not more is exactly because of this business plan. They plan on making most of their money through selling focused advertising. TiVo has not been making a whole hell of a lot of money, and this is strategy is aimed at changing that. Essentially you have been getting a kickback since you signed up for TiVo since you have been paying a reduced subscription fee to TiVo as they have long planned to begin this advertising campaign.

    4. Re:Kickback? by LinuxHam · · Score: 1

      FYI, I friended you b/c of your TiVo connection..

      I would like to suggest that TiVo use the Internet to download content when connected via broadband. My unit asked me if I wanted to see info on a new Acura, and I started to sign up when I realized they wanted to **mail** stuff to me! When I say yes to those things, I want my unit to download a 15 minute infomercial that night and post an email telling me when the content I requested (man, that sounds just like spam) is ready for viewing. The last thing I need in my house is **more paper**!!

      --
      Intelligent Life on Earth
    5. Re:Kickback? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      OH BULLSHIT! It's not my fault that they have a flawed business plan where they consciously decided to sell their "service" and devices at an unsupportable cost just so they could sucker people in, then extract datum from the masses, and sell that to advertisers so they could deliver advertising that I don't want to me!

      Their advertising for the Tivo says nothing - N O T H I N G about this plan. If they said "hey, we're selling our box cheap, giving you the service cheap, but want to capture info on you and sell it to marketers so we can target advertising at you" - then they might have a case, but right now - I have to say "tough cookies" if they're not making "enough money"...

  28. And again by psychophil.com · · Score: 5, Insightful
    This came up during the superbowl commercial rating. Tivo released info saying which superbowl commercials its viewers watched most.


    Again I say, Tivo selling the viewing info is a GOOD THING. I am tired of shows I like getting cancelled for lack of Neilson ratings. I've never been nor have I even known a Neilson family. I don't like the fact that someone else is deciding what's good TV and what should be cancelled.


    This will broaden the base of input for TV ratings. Another plus, Tivo owners tend to be geekish. This will most likely help the rating and staying power of shows that geeks watch (sci-fi to be specific). Maybe we finally have a fighting chance against inane 30 minute sitcoms and 'reality' TV.

    1. Re:And again by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I was a Neilson family.. heh well for a 3 week period last year during sprint sweeps.

      The problem was that the Neilson form has no concept of time shifting, so it was almost impossible to fill out "properly". I ended up just filling in the times of my favorite programs and then sending it in. Hell some of the things I listed I hadn't watched for days or weeks after the sweeps period.

      Personally I am in favor of TiVo doing agregate show ratings based on zip code or other "generalized" methods. This will hopefully insure more programming people want to watch.. and may even allow the TV networks to realize that I don't want to watch programming at 7pm Monday.. but instead to put the good shows on the air on Tuesday night.

    2. Re:And again by Cro+Magnon · · Score: 1

      I can't complain about ANYTHING that will get s#itcoms & (un)reality shows off the air!

      --
      Slow down, cowboy! It has been 4 hours since you last posted. You must wait another few hours.
    3. Re:And again by mbourgon · · Score: 1

      Yes, but considering one of the draws of this is that you're skipping through commercials, won't they look at and say "well, 6 million people watch it, but 3 million of them TiVo it, so we really only reach 3 mill? Pass."

      --
      "Sometimes a woman is a kind of religion, she can save your soul & set you free from all your sins" - Bad Examples
    4. Re:And again by rogo78 · · Score: 1

      My roommate and I were a Neilsen family, too, for one week. We got one booklet for each TV in the house. There was a page in the booklet for listing shows that you taped while watching another program.

      In my case, I taped a show while I was out and watched it later... I think I followed the directions correctly when I wrote "VCR" next to program in its proper time slot.

      Of course, I also watched the Simpsons at another house and marked it in my own booklet. Heck, what's the difference?

      This was a month ago.

    5. Re:And again by psychophil.com · · Score: 1

      I disagree. First and formost, advertising is always adapting. Commercial skip/ff is not going away and they realize this. A well produced commercial advertises the product even when played at a very high speed. This is very evident even today when watching programs on the tivo

      Also, if advertisors are watching the info, they will see that some commercials (ie: the ones I find damn funny) will actually be REWOUND and watched again.

  29. Viewing habits private? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    While they might make the information to data miners aggregate they still know what YOU are watching. When you tv calls up I would assume you are IDENTIFIED to make sure you are a ligit subscriber to dl the content.

    So Tivo know what you watch and most likely could have this info by person in a database. You anonymity is dependate on how they collect and store the data. Any have this in writting?

  30. Focused Advertising by mjmalone · · Score: 5, Insightful

    My brother works for TiVo, and they have been planning to do this from the getgo. The idea is that they will be able to target advertising to different customer groups. For example, Ford might buy a 30 second ad spot, on a TV owned by a single man, 25 years old, might display an ad for a Ford Mustang while a TV owned by a family of 5 might show an ad for a minivan. This doesnt seem like a big deal to me, in fact I kind of like the fact that I wont have to sit through as many ads for crap I really am not interested in... I can finally watch the beer and sports car commercials I love so much.

    1. Re:Focused Advertising by grub · · Score: 1

      That's much like saying you "kind of like" the targetted banner ads that you get from doubleclick et al.

      --
      Trolling is a art,
    2. Re:Focused Advertising by mjmalone · · Score: 1

      If I have to see them, I'd rather they be targetted. I don't mind ads so much as long as 1) they dont get in the way and 2) they are for things I am interested in. Advertising is a legitimate business and an important one in our economy. Wouldn't you rather see ads for things you like, computers, technology, etc. than things you don't really care about?

    3. Re:Focused Advertising by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No.

    4. Re:Focused Advertising by SuperQ · · Score: 4, Interesting

      What I'd like to see is for there to be an option in the tivo ad item (main screen) to thumb-down an ad I don't like, or don't even want to watch..

    5. Re:Focused Advertising by mjmalone · · Score: 1

      From what I understand features like this are being implemented. One feature similar to this is the ability to "thumbs up" an ad for a TV show that is displayed, which would automaticaly queue the show for recording on your box. A feature like the one you describe would not only be useful for the consumer, but logical for TiVo as well because it would allow them to focus their advertising further. I'm sure something like this will show up in the not too distant future.

    6. Re:Focused Advertising by mrpuffypants · · Score: 1

      In the meantime I shall use the 30-sec skip backdoor code

      Select-Play-Select-3-0-Select

      No more commercials for me!

    7. Re:Focused Advertising by zsmooth · · Score: 1

      This "thumbs-up"-ing a preview for an upcoming show only works for a handful of shows on NBC. But when it's there, it's dang convenient!

    8. Re:Focused Advertising by mjmalone · · Score: 1

      Yea, as far as I know they're rolling it out slowly and the NBC shows are a test. It should show up on more channels soon. :)

    9. Re:Focused Advertising by Jester99 · · Score: 2, Funny

      Hmm.. Targetted ads *might* be good. But they might also be a bad thing sometimes.

      Scenario 1: Tivo sends you (a young guy) ads about beer, SUVs, and Levi's jeans. It sends the woman in the apartment down the hall ads for women's clothing.

      Scenario 2: Because of interesting purchases, viewing habits, whatever on your part, it sends you ads for women's clothing.

      Scenario 3: For the same reason, it sends you those same ads, and your buds come over to watch the football game on your bigscreen TV. *Insert awkward pause in conversation here*.

      Targetted ads sound a-ok on the surface, but sometimes, it's nice to be anonymous.

    10. Re:Focused Advertising by TheAwfulTruth · · Score: 1

      Quote: " in fact I kind of like the fact that I wont have to sit through as many ads for crap I really am not interested in... I can finally watch the beer and sports car commercials I love so much."

      Only if that's what all your neighbors watch also! GOd help you if you are the only person that hates that stuff in a community. Now EVERY ad will be offensive and NO ad will be anything you "want" to see. This is the dark side of generic location based advertising (Not that they don do that now to some degree)

      Actualy PERSONAL ad placement might actually be ok, but then that would definately be more of a privacy issue. As it stands I'd still ahve to side with the "Just show it all to me and let me decide if I like it or not" philosophy.

      --
      Contrary to popular belief, coding is not all free blow-jobs and beer. Those things cost MONEY!
    11. Re:Focused Advertising by mjmalone · · Score: 1

      I think a lot of it will be more personal then you imagine. I'm not familiar with the details, but for one thing some ads are sent directly to TiVo boxes (if you own a TiVo youll notice this occasionally on your menu). Also a large portion of TiVo subscribers are not using cable, but satellite. Satellite subscribers could potentially pull down ads that are tailored to their group specifically rather than to a specific zip code.

    12. Re:Focused Advertising by The+Lynxpro · · Score: 1

      They do that with NBC because NBC is sponsoring it and also holds a stake in TiVo. NBC has been broadcasting the *thumbs up* option on their spots even back during the TiVo Series1 models...

      --
      "Right now, somewhere in this world, Scott Baio is plowing a woman he doesn't love," - Peter Griffin, *Family Guy*
    13. Re:Focused Advertising by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Great. You tivangelists always come out of the woodwork to defend your pet company. It's getting harder and harder to defend them with news like this constantly surfacing, isn't it?

      Why don't you give up and find a real cause to fight for.

    14. Re:Focused Advertising by hesiod · · Score: 1

      > That's much like saying you "kind of like" the targetted banner ads that you get from doubleclick et al.

      Well, I block ads for most sites, but I don't block them from Slashdot, because those are more likely to be something I'm interested in. So yes, in practice, I like targetted ads better than random crap.

    15. Re:Focused Advertising by mjmalone · · Score: 1

      Nobody is forcing you to buy a TiVo, new customers are informed that viewing data may be sold in aggregate in the user policy, if you dont like it don't buy one. It's not like they are spying on everyone without them knowing it.

    16. Re:Focused Advertising by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, I thought they were already selling the aggregate data, so it doesn't bother me one bit.

    17. Re:Focused Advertising by Kombat · · Score: 1

      Only if that's what all your neighbors watch also! GOd help you if you are the only person that hates that stuff in a community. Now EVERY ad will be offensive and NO ad will be anything you "want" to see.

      Uhm, is this realistic? I mean, think about it. If your TV is bombarded with ads for walking canes and elderly life insurance, then you're probably living in a community with a very high density of old people. Why would you be living there, unless you're an old person yourself? I mean, sure, most neighborhoods will have a few, but you said what if "you are the only person that hates that stuff", meaning EVERYONE else in your neighborhood is in the target demographic, except you.

      If that's the case, than I suggest that you made a drastic mistake when choosing where to live. Don't people generally want to live around other people like them?

      --
      Like woodworking? Build your own picture frames.
    18. Re:Focused Advertising by tgibbs · · Score: 1

      If you don't want to watch it, then it isn't very well focused. I expect they'll do it like the ads they are currently showing--it appears on the menu, and you watch it or not, as you choose.

    19. Re:Focused Advertising by InsaneGeek · · Score: 1

      They've also been doing it on movie channels for quite some time (I remember seeing it popup quite often on the Action channel last year).

    20. Re:Focused Advertising by 5KVGhost · · Score: 1

      I'd like that too. I think PVRs have a lot of untapped potential related to advertising.

      For example, I'd like to rate advertisments with thumbs-up/down the same way shows can be rated, and the ability to add a TV show featured in a promo directly to the To Do list for later recording.

      Further information about certain products (like that new car that caught your eye, or a new movie) could be downloaded as a "Showcase" item on request, and with some more effort that information could even be localized for the viewer (local dealers and sales offers, or local movie showtimes).

      If we've got to have commercials (and I think we do) then let's focus on making them more useful. Not with hokey interactive features but by making them work for us in ways we already know and appreciate.

    21. Re:Focused Advertising by Cro+Magnon · · Score: 1

      By that logic, I'll probably start getting ads in Spanish! Except I don't speak Spanish! When I moved into that neighborhood, most people spoke English. So why don't I move? Because I happen to like my house, especially since it's almost paid for. Besides, these days nobody actually TALKS to their neighbors!

      --
      Slow down, cowboy! It has been 4 hours since you last posted. You must wait another few hours.
    22. Re:Focused Advertising by Lord_Dweomer · · Score: 1
      " What I'd like to see is for there to be an option in the tivo ad item (main screen) to thumb-down an ad I don't like, or don't even want to watch.."

      Interesting concept, however there are a couple of things to consider here.

      First is that the networks won't like this, because if an ad doesn't do well, the advertiser could come to the network and say "hey, this is your fault, do something about it or let us buy time at a lower rate, because obviously that spot isn't worth as much as you said it was."

      Second, this could really screw with ad agencies in a double-edged way. If they make a tv spot, they really have no way of quantifying it's success....or failure, unless it's tied to some special kind of promotion. But once you throw this into the equation, suddenly it can be a very good thing, or a VERY bad thing. "hey look, we're a good agency, see, people like the tv spot we did for you, you should keep using us." or the flip side "Our tv spot bombed, and you made it, so it's your fault, we want you to fix it for free......or you're never getting our business again, and we'll give it to someone who has gotten consistently better ratings."

      Now, I'm not saying whether these things are good or bad, just interesting things to consider. It's funny how technology can have such potentially adverse affects.

      --
      Buy Steampunk Clothing Online!
  31. 1997 MIT study said aggregate data defeats privacy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    From the draft HIPAA Privacy Rule's Preamble:

    "A 1997 MIT study showed that, because of the public availability of the Cambridge, Massachusetts voting list, 97 percent of the individuals in Cambridge whose data appeared in a data base which contained only their nine
    digit zip code and birth date could be identified with certainty. Their information had been ``de-identified'' (some obvious identifiers had been removed) but it was not anonymous (it was still
    possible to identify the individual).

    \1\ Sweeney, L. Guaranteeing Anonymity when Sharing Medical Data, the Datafly System. Masys, D., Ed. Proceedings, American
    Medical Informatics Association, Nashville, TN: Hanley & Belfus, Inc., 1997:51-55."

  32. Maybe they'll seel my info... by JohnnySkidmarks · · Score: 1

    to some crafty politician who will realize that people like me exist in his/her region and get pissed off when Large companies rights trample my own, again and again.....

    --

    I went to battle MC Escher but drew a blank

    1. Re:Maybe they'll seel my info... by ovit · · Score: 0

      Those "evil corporations" you hate so much are the ones who feed, clothe, entertain and educate you. The greed of those who have come before you make you're very existence possible.

      I'm sorry, I just hate mindless corp bashing...

    2. Re:Maybe they'll seel my info... by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      That's because they ran all of the small fry out of business. If given the choice between some cooperative in Iowa and Con-Agra, I'll take the co-op thankyouverymuch. The human race did just fine before the faceless corporations started running amok. Business doesn't necessarily have to come in the form of a Borg Cube.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
  33. Why not? by Keith+Mickunas · · Score: 2, Interesting

    If they use this information wisely, we all win. Admittedly that's a big if, but if the data is such that they can determine geek viewing habits, we can have more quality geek TV.

    1. Re:Why not? by ClippyHater · · Score: 1

      That would only be true if we all lived in a big geek commune. (Un)fortunately, we've spread to the 4 corners of the known world and can't claim a single zip code as ours.

    2. Re:Why not? by RobotRunAmok · · Score: 2, Funny

      we can have more quality geek TV

      And that would be... what, exactly?

      I missed a meeting, tell me what I'm supposed to be watching in order to keep my membership card.

    3. Re:Why not? by hesiod · · Score: 1

      > can't claim a single zip code as ours.

      That's just wrong. We should make our own zip, possibly 31337. It isn't taken.

  34. Exactly right. by BoomerSooner · · Score: 4, Interesting

    HIPAA laws even allow for this. I work in long term care and we group data by regions. We just remove all identifiable data.

    This allows us to do trending and catch things that would otherwise be impossible.

    Trending is good when it's aggregate data. When the book police come to your door it's bad.

    1. Re:Exactly right. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Whoo boy. I wouldn't want to be responsible for redacting the identifiable data. Suppose you miss something - I bet there are all sorts of fines and penalties just waiting to come down on your head for leaking that info.

    2. Re:Exactly right. by gmhowell · · Score: 1

      Hell, you can print a patient's complete chart on the web, as long as it contains no way to identify the person. HIPAA, making us work harder to maintain the status quo.

      --
      Jesus was all right but his disciples were thick and ordinary. -John Lennon
  35. I'm tired of this by Palshife · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Read the privacy policy. It's been around since TiVo was founded, and nothing in that time has changed.

    TiVo has been selling your demographic data for years. Superbowl advertisers bought information from TiVo to see which Brittney Spears commercial got the most replay and in which kinds of households.

    This has absolutely nothing to do with an infrigement of rights, as it all strictly adheres to an agreement between customer and provider made fully clear at the time of purchase.

    To offset the costs of building and maintaining a complicated system that provides an excellent service to consumers they sell information on their demographics. Anyone wanna tell me how that makes them evil all of a sudden?

    --
    Attention deficit disorder is a complicated issue, spanning several major... HEY LET'S GO RIDE BIKES!
    1. Re:I'm tired of this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      i am a geek and was wondering what is britney spears. i did a google imagine search. her face looks funny and different. what are those pointy things near the top of her chest?

    2. Re:I'm tired of this by Palshife · · Score: 1

      Those are called silicone torpedoes, Timmy.

      --
      Attention deficit disorder is a complicated issue, spanning several major... HEY LET'S GO RIDE BIKES!
  36. Re:Maybe they'll se(l)l my info... by JohnnySkidmarks · · Score: 1

    I corrected my self...but it would be nice IF a politician WOULD seal my info

    --

    I went to battle MC Escher but drew a blank

  37. Help! TiVo thinks you're gay! by Thud457 · · Score: 1

    Remember, this is TiVo we're talking about. You'll be getting gay pr0n commercials!

    --

    the preceding comment is my own and in no way reflects the opinion of the Joint Chiefs of Staff

  38. ...may I have another? by presearch · · Score: 3, Insightful

    You buy a TiVo box for a few hundred, pay a few hundred
    more for the subscription that doesn't really pay
    for content, just indexing and the privilege of them
    not disabling the box that you paid for. All of this in
    order to watch commercial-filled television that you
    are also paying your sat or cable company even more
    money for, all tied up in a DRM wrapper.

    Now, they are collecting your stats, your private life
    (as collected on the box you paid for, perhaps continually),
    and selling it. And people here think it's great because
    (at least today) it's not directly tied to your name.

    Boy, that TV must be really great stuff.

    1. Re:...may I have another? by stratjakt · · Score: 1

      Slashbot hyporcrisy is easily understood: it runs on linux!

      --
      I don't need no instructions to know how to rock!!!!
    2. Re:...may I have another? by Wateshay · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I know you're just trying to be funny, but that's really not accurate:

      1) If you fail to subscribe to the TiVo service, they don't in any way shape or form disable your box. Of course, you don't have access to the subscription information, or software updates, which are what the service pays for, and which are in my personal opinion well worth the cost of the service.

      2) You've apparently never used a TiVo. Most TiVo users rarely ever watch commercials. They fast forward through them because they're watching things that have been previously recorded.

      3) The TiVo doesn't have any DRM. It's on-disk data format is undocumented, but if you look online you can find software that has figured out how to extract it. There is, however, no encryption, and nothing that keeps you from duping something on your TiVo off onto a VCR tape (in fact the TiVo has some features that make that process easier).

      4) From the beginning, TiVo has always reserved the right to sell aggregate data, and has always promised to protect individual data. Nothing has changed. It is also unlikely that anything will change, because individual data is next to worthless. No one cares whether or not you watch American Idol. They only care what percentage of 18-30 year olds watch American Idol. The bad PR that TiVo would receive would never be worth the value of selling individual data.

      --

      "If English was good enough for Jesus, it's good enough for everyone else."

    3. Re:...may I have another? by FattMattP · · Score: 1
      And you're posting a message on slashdot, using a computer you had to pay several hundred for (at least), paying a monthly fee for some form of net access to read commercial-filled web pages. You're also a subscriber to Slashdot who has your personal information and a list of comments that you've posted (rich in information pertaining to you, no doubt).

      And you think Tivo keeping track of the fact that someone in some zipcode somewhere watches Seinfeld is an issue? What's your point again?

      --
      Prevent email address forgery. Publish SPF records for y
    4. Re:...may I have another? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      You buy a TiVo box for a few hundred, pay a few hundred more for the subscription ... blah blah blah

      It's not like they ever hid the fact that they were going to collect this demographic info. They certainly aren't sending everyone's name and address out with this data, either. And I love the usefulness of my TiVo.

      And as others have already pointed out, I'm happy to show the broadcasters what shows (and commercials) I bother to watch, and which I completely skip. In the end, maybe they'll make more interesting commercials that I'd actually watch.

      With my boy, I already find myself sitting through the kid's show commercials, some more entertaining than the program they support, and even rewinding some of them multiple times. Late night commercials are usually bland and I skip past nearly all of them immediately.

      So, yes, that TV can be really great stuff when you have control over what and when to watch (including the commercials).

      {Too lazy to actually create a /. account}

    5. Re:...may I have another? by Cinematique · · Score: 1

      In mass media, you have three options to pay for content.

      *Subscription-based ~ All income to the content provider comes from subscriber funding. Depending on the size and scope (and greed) of the network/publication, fees can be extremely high. Examples: HBO or PBS.

      *Mixed ~ This includes many American cable channels and magazines. You pay a fee, substantially lower than a subscription-only content provider, because advertizing pays for the majority of the content provider's expenses. Examples: Your local newspaper and MTV.

      *Advertizing-only ~ Ads pay for almost, if not all, of the operating expenses for a given content provider. This includes ABC/NBC/CBS/FOX and others. NetZero tried this. Look where they are now.

      Seeing that I only have so much money to spend, I'd rather see a handful of ads in order to keep the fees I must pay to recieve content as low as possible. I imagine most of America agrees with me. Do you have a magical forth option? One that doesn't involve taxing consumers?

      I could go on to elaborate on how cable/satellite pricing is *too* high, but I'm probably off-topic as it is.

    6. Re:...may I have another? by danielobvt · · Score: 1

      Bugger off then... I don't make fun of the ways that you entertain yourself, why dont you put that same policy in play.

    7. Re:...may I have another? by presearch · · Score: 1

      using a computer you had to pay several hundred for..
      Hey, I resent that. I use a Mac and paid thousands.

    8. Re:...may I have another? by presearch · · Score: 1

      I wasn't trying to be funny, I was being angry, bitter,
      and dissapointed in a future that I thought would work
      better without paying a tax for every little thing imaginable,
      plus be monitored while I do it. How much is enough?

      - I have a 1st gen tivo that's unsubscribed and it's a doorstop that
      continually bitches that it wants money.
      In no money mode, it should act like a nice, full featured vcr.
      Let me set my own times, channel etc. with no gripes about paying up.
      Yeah, I know it's TiVo's commerce model. Screw TiVo's commerce model.

      - Having to press a fast forward button like a lab rat every
      4.5 minutes to bypass commercials isn't a very pleasant activity.

      - It's digital data. I should be able to hit the thing on my local
      net and pull data without making hacking the tivo my hobby.
      These functional limitations are completly artificial.
      Sure, I could figure it out, but what's that time worth?

      I don't have to fill my fridge with freon every two months.
      I could figure out how to do that too. But I don't want to.
      I'm glad that Amana hasn't adpoted the media biz model or
      we'd be hunted down for stealing "cold".

      I bought it. It -can- do it. It should, out of the box.
      If I wanted a vhs copy, I would have used a vcr.

      - I had subscribed to DirecTV for years. For >50$ a month, and going up,
      you get 150 channels of content that are >50% commercials.
      Late night, it's more like 70% with all of the infomercial filler time -that I'm paying for-.

      I've pushed myself away from the table and said I've had enough.

      How long must we continue to suckle the corporate snoot and say "Yum!"?

    9. Re:...may I have another? by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      Get a grip and get over yourself.
      "TV Guide" has never been free.
      One has always had to pay for that sort of
      information . The Tivo subscription service is
      nothing more than an extension of the old status
      quo in this matter.

      Only in the leech & mooch culture that grew up
      over the dot.bomb was there ever an expectation
      that you could get tv guide data completely for
      free.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    10. Re:...may I have another? by presearch · · Score: 1

      One has always had to pay for that sort of information .

      $12.95 a month to hit a TV listings database?
      ...an expectation that you could get tv guide data completely for free.

      It's NOT "completely free".
      Looking at the site, a TiVo costs $250-$350. Plus, I'm providing viewing stats that they are selling for profit.

      The leech & mooch cultures are the companies that follow the "Buy a big ticket item, plus pay a monthly charge or we turn it off" model.
      It's all about playing the customer/consumer for a sucker. Tivo, XM, Sirius... Death by a thousand ($10.00) cuts.

      DirecTV, although high priced, sells the dish pretty cheap and that's much more content than just your month of local listings.

      -
      And last time I looked, titantv.com had "free" tv listings. I checked, there's nothing good on tonight...

    11. Re:...may I have another? by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      XM is a largely commercial free service. So this is hardly a compelling example of how you are being squeezed by crass corporate interests.

      Paying a monthly fee for XM is no different than paying for HBO.

      Again, you're stuck in the mooch/entitlement mentality that the dot.bomb debacle encouraged.

      If you don't like Tivo's monthly fee, you can always gamble on the lifetime subscription.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
  39. Cool... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Maybe they'll see the three Mothra movies I recorded this weekend and program an "all giant monster" channel for me. :)

  40. What's new? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I thought they had been doing this all along.

  41. I know this isn't a popular view but... by SatanicPuppy · · Score: 1

    I am a data FIEND. I LOVE data, I love varied data, good data, bad data, random data, and wierd data. I like playing with it, and running stats on it and basically just wallowing in it.

    So frankly, pretty much any data collection gets my approval, as long as anonymity is preserved. Really, the specific data is the least useful. Who cares what one guy does? There is no reason to collect that data except for the express purpose of violating someones privacy. Now tell me what every guy between 20 and 30 is doing, and I'll be frickin ecstatic.

    Just my opinion.

    --
    ad logicam Claiming a proposition is false because it was presented as the conclusion of a fallacious argument.
    1. Re:I know this isn't a popular view but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Easy, boy.

    2. Re:I know this isn't a popular view but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well then, here's some more anonymously preserved data for you:

      weird, not wierd

    3. Re:I know this isn't a popular view but... by SatanicPuppy · · Score: 1

      Hmmmmmmmmm.
      I misspelled weird. Wow. Ask me if I give a shit. You auditioning for a job as a spellchecker?

      --
      ad logicam Claiming a proposition is false because it was presented as the conclusion of a fallacious argument.
  42. Doesn't really matter... by opusbuddy · · Score: 1

    Given this morning's FCC vote, there's soon to only be one media company, anyway. Then, all Rupert Murdock would have to do is buy Tivo. This just saves everyone time and money...


    --
    If this were easy, they wouldn't need us to do it!
  43. Who doesn't sell data ? by tmark · · Score: 3, Insightful

    OSDN is already using your data for their own benefit:

    OSDN may use accumulated aggregate data for several purposes including, but not limited to, marketing analysis, evaluation of OSDN's services, and business planning. .

    There is no prohibition against selling it to other parties. So why the cry of wolf ? I'm pretty sure that if someone found aggregate Slashdot information useful, OSDN would be - or is - selling it. And I don't care. Is it a violation of my privacy if some marketing firm studies aggregate customer behavior in a store and discovers that the majority of customers turn right when they enter ? I don't think it is, and that sort of aggregate research is happening all the time.

    1. Re:Who doesn't sell data ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That kind of research should be illegal. It has no legitimate purpose. It leads to a slippery slope where further liberties are taken. If a company wants to study itself (hmmm, ice cream sells better on hot days), fine. But there is no legitimate reason for a company to study its customers.

    2. Re:Who doesn't sell data ? by hesiod · · Score: 1

      > That kind of research should be illegal. It has no legitimate purpose

      (-1, Troll) or (-1, blind fucking idiot)? Which one are you? If the answer is the second one, the answer is that it shows what kind of people like certain things in a particular area. I happened to hear (on NPR this morning) a story about WalMart using customer data to find out that (American) Southerners preferred powdered laundry soap & northerners preferred liquid (in general, of course). That way, they can fill up the shelves in those areas with the ones that get bought, therefore they are able to save money by not overbuying, retaining extra shelf real-estate, etc. Most of the time this means an improvement for the customer, such as more variety of brands you want, more available on the shelf (although a product running out in Wal-Mart is unlikely), and possibly lower prices.

      There's a legitimate use for you.

    3. Re:Who doesn't sell data ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, I'm not trolling, you're missing the point. The kind of knowledge you are referring to can be gained by a business studying itself. If it learns that its liquid products do better in its Southern stores, and vice versa, great. But there is no legitimate need for the business to study its customers to figure this out.

    4. Re:Who doesn't sell data ? by hitchgoat · · Score: 1

      No, you're missing the point: it's the same thing. Walmart gets the data for its customer studies by looking at POS data, right? TiVo gets the data for its customer studies by looking at viewing data. It just happens that TiVo is selling the data to the very people who allow them to stay in business: advertisers.

    5. Re:Who doesn't sell data ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      POS? Pro advertisers? Aaaah, spoken like a true marketroid. Sorry, but I don't think it's the same thing. Walmart can develop this data by looking at before/after inventory on its shelves. It doesn't need to study its customers. If Tivo wants that kind of information maybe it can develop a way to capture the data as it leaves its source. If Tivo can't capture it that way, and the only alternative is to study their viewer's habits, then Tivo needs to accept that this information just isn't available to them and move on to other ways to make money. Like, maybe marketing their respect for their customers such that they will never inspect their customers and treat US like the product.

  44. so basicly they are saying by the_2nd_coming · · Score: 1

    "we have x number of customers inthis zip code and here are the zipcodes viewing statistics......

    so damn what...as long as my address is not included I see no problem.

    --



    I am the Alpha and the Omega-3
  45. Ain't no thing.... by billmaly · · Score: 4, Insightful

    1. I record shows for the kids and History/Discovery channel stuff for myself. A few network shows here and there, and once in awhile, a little T&A off the cable channels. Naughty, but not really embarassing. If this gets "reported" I can live with it. However, it's broken down by zip code, so I don't have many concerns. Plus, if it shows that I really like well thought out, witty commercials (there are some out there), basically advertainment and not mindless ads, and this creates better advertainment for me, is this not a good thing?

    2. TiVo could become more relevant that Neilsen data. Imagine, they can break down for networks what was recorded vs. what was actually watched, when it was watched, and what commercials were watched while viewing. Combine this with the fact (here's where TiVo shareholder's laugh with glee) that I will PAY THEM to LET THEM track this data, and be happy to do so, it's a win win for the company and the consumer.

    TiVo truly does put one in control of their viewing. If they want to gather a little data, virtually anonymously, fine by me.

    1. Re:Ain't no thing.... by hesiod · · Score: 1

      > I will PAY THEM to LET THEM track this data

      You are right, the only thing I would change is that you pay them less to let them track this data. If this was not available to them, the subscription prices would probably be higher.

  46. Both Good and Bad by Capt_Troy · · Score: 1

    Initially i thought that this was a good thing. If a bunch of geeks like me are out there watching the same shows as I am and those numbers are being represented to the stations then maybe I wouldn't have to start watching a show, think it's good, and then wonder what happened to it (firefly).

    However, should the stations use this information in the same manner as they use the neilson stuff (which I assume is regulated in distribution somehow) then what's to keep some production company from buying a bunch of Tivos and having them record their shows, or paying Tivo users to record and play a show (not necessarily watch it). say for 5 bucks, record a show and play it while your taking a nap or something.

    So I am both interested and worried. But for the most part, I think it would take a large number of cheaters to offset that of the legitimate watchers.

    Troy

    1. Re:Both Good and Bad by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nothing can stop them from this other than the same kind of thing that stops nvidia and ati from fudging their numbers. Sooner or later someone will find out and then that company will have to answer for it (particularly with their advertisers).

    2. Re:Both Good and Bad by geekoid · · Score: 1

      because the shere volume of people needed to effect this would make it cost prohibitive.
      you would need, at a minimum, 3 million people to make this effective. so 150 million dollars.
      If it was cost effective, then it would be interesting, because all the networks would do it, so you could get paid for switching to show A. heh.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
  47. "Zip codes aren't a privacy problem" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Comments by many people here state that this isn't an invasion of privacy because TiVo only tells the zipcode. While normally I would agree, these same people howl whenever they hear about spyware. If you have a problem with spyware that claims that it does not give away personally identifiable information, then why don't you have a problem with this (assuming the spyware license doesn't lie. For all you know, they could be telling the truth, despite their shady nature)? I realize that spyware has many other issues as well (eating up your bandwidth and resources) but most of the complaints seem to come from the invasion of privacy that people feel.

    1. Re:"Zip codes aren't a privacy problem" by hesiod · · Score: 1

      > assuming the spyware license doesn't lie

      I think the problem w/ spyware is that usually there isn't a license to read. The software is installed without your knowledge (or with minimal notice at least). With TiVo, you should have (yeah, I don't read them all either) read your agreement that contained this information in it.

    2. Re:"Zip codes aren't a privacy problem" by WebMasterJoe · · Score: 1

      Spyware frequently lies to you about its intentions, or installs without telling you. This is where the invasion of privacy comes in, because you don't know that "they" are spying on you. I can't speak for others, but my concerns with spyware are that people who don't know as much about computers are filling their machines up with cometcursors and gator and the like, and me, being the good friend that I am, have to go clean up their systems for them. I don't mind them trying to install on my system so much, because I know how to find them and get rid of them (and I use linux on my home machine, which also helps a lot).

      Tivo, on the other hand, is collecting market research data, and letting you know about it. They aren't hiding their intentions, and for that reason it's easier to trust that they are keeping to their word and not collecting information that can be used to track you individually. When the company tells you what it is up to, the privacy issue is not such a big deal.

      --
      I really hate signatures, but go to my website.
  48. Blipverts here we come! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Drink C-c-c-c-coke!

  49. Well, Duh. by irving47 · · Score: 1

    Hopefully mods will see past the topic before modding me down...
    TiVo has been saying they're doing to do this for years now. It's always been planned to do this by zip code with no names. Yeah, it's really going to suck. They're (The networks) are going to figure out what we like and make MORE OF IT! Yeah, we're screwed over on this one, alright.
    TiVo users are probably very heavily in the tech. industry. That means our shows are probably pretty similar. Family Guy, Futurama, John Doe (maybe), The Agency... Seeing a pattern here? Shows that were cancelled. Maybe we can balance out the Neilson ratings. They use, what? 4000 families for the whole country?

    --
    I had a sucky sig.
  50. The 11th Right .... by willtsmith · · Score: 1

    Privacy !!!!

    This is an excellent example why we need a constitutional right to privacy. The authors of the Bill of Rights could NEVER have forseen the advent of information technology and it's profound implications.

    Companies are OUT OF CONTROL regarding what they do with are personal information. They should be made to keep it PRIVATE, and be held liable for damages if they release it without permission.

    --
    -------- -------- Support Wesley Clark for president!!!
    1. Re:The 11th Right .... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I would take it even farther. It should be illegal to even collect that personal information. Tivo just crossed itself off the list of companies I want to do business with. The companies I like actually respect their customers, and don't study us like bugs under a microscope.

    2. Re:The 11th Right .... by hesiod · · Score: 1

      > This is an excellent example why we need a constitutional right to privacy

      The problem is, what amount of privacy would it cover? Would it cover anonymous data collecting? Publishing your phone number in a phone book? Making your home address available to individuals who need to send you real mail?

      I'm not arguing, mind you, we should have some sort of rights to privacy, but it's a lot harder than just saying "we need a constitutional amendment that says 'Citizens have the right to privacy.'"

  51. How Tivo Ruined my life - A potentially true story by ethaz · · Score: 5, Funny
    See, they could get the radius server logs from UUNet and then check the time of the call and compare it with logs received at that time and look for the secret code embedded in the logs [they deny it but I know it's there] and then compare it to the wiretaps from Echelon and then run the whole thing through the NSA supercomputer and then they'll know that I watched the Brady Bunch and then my boss will know [because he gets a secret report on me from the NSA] and then I'll be passed over for promotion because he is a
    Partridge Family fan and then I'll be a target for the next layoff and then I'll be laid off and then I'll lose my house and then my wife will leave me and then I'll get beat up at the rescue mission over a bottle of MD20-20 and then they'll put impants in my brain at the emergency room and then the CIA will transmit orders to me through PBS and then I'll have to wear aluminum foil on my head all the time and then that won't matter because while I am laying in the gutter on skid row George W. Bush and Dick Cheney will send a UFO to abduct me and then I'll get probed (ouch) and then the aliens will clone me and then the clone will take over my old life and then I'll be a slave in the methane mines on Altair IV and then I'll get spaced by a slorg monster and then I'll die. All because of Tivo.



    (I posted this to Usenet a while back, but since the privacy hysteria is starting again, I thought I would outline the threat as seen by some.)

  52. About time..... by sllim · · Score: 1

    Who needs Neilson when we have Tivo?
    I am absolutely serious. That is the data Tivo needs to be selling.

  53. This bothers you WHY??? by spiedrazer · · Score: 1
    It will just tell coprate america that in your zip code, 3300 people watched friends while 4300 were watching CSI? How does this cause a problem for you personnally?

    --
    Keep passing the open windows...
  54. Stalker's delight! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Damn, he gives you a guided tour of his house!

    (Not to mention pictures of his Wife, baby, & parent's house. I'll let some more stalwart troll than I take that one!)

    Just don't go into the basement Mr. Ramsey!

  55. You're wrong, and the USPS says so by Palshife · · Score: 1

    From usps.com

    Q. Why are ZIP+4 Codes used?

    A. In 1983, the Postal Service began using an expanded ZIP Code called "ZIP+4." A ZIP+4 Code consists of the original 5-digit ZIP Code plus a 4-digit add-on code. The 4-digit add-on number identifies a geographic segment within the 5-digit delivery area, such as a city block, office building, individual high-volume receiver of mail, or any other unit that would aid efficient mail sorting and delivery. Use of the 4-digit add-on is not mandatory, but it helps the Postal Service direct mail more efficiently and accurately because it reduces handling and significantly decreases the potential for human error and possibility of misdelivery. It also will lead to better control over USPS costs and, in turn, postage rate stability. ZIP+4 is intended for use primarily by business mailers who prepare their mail with typewritten, machine-printed, or computerized addressing formats that can be read by the Postal Service's automated scanners during processing. Mailers who qualify receive a rate discount on First-Class, non-presorted, ZIP+4 mailings of at least 250 pieces and on presorted ZIP+4 mailings of at least 500 pieces. There are also ZIP+4 discounts for bulk business mail.

    --
    Attention deficit disorder is a complicated issue, spanning several major... HEY LET'S GO RIDE BIKES!
    1. Re:You're wrong, and the USPS says so by UnknowingFool · · Score: 1
      The 4-digit add-on number identifies a geographic segment within the 5-digit delivery area, such as a city block, office building, individual high-volume receiver of mail . . .

      Logically, that would identify neighborhoods and rural zones. In sparsely populated areas like in Montana where neighbors may be separated by miles, it will identify individual homes. For the most people living in cities, it will not give that level of granularity.

      --
      Well, there's spam egg sausage and spam, that's not got much spam in it.
  56. Could be a good thing by confusion · · Score: 1

    For years and years I've often thought the Neilson families either hand picked to reflected the desired outcome or spent too much time in front of the microwave. I'm well versed in statistics, but I think that the small subset, and heavy weighting tends to short sell a lot of shows that actually have good viewership (read: the shows I like)

    I think this may be an opportunity for a larger dataset to be weighed as networks and advertisers analyze the successfulness of a given show.

    As for privacy, I don't really see a problem so long as it is an agregate, but then who knows when that will change.

    I do love my tivo, though.

    1. Re:Could be a good thing by hesiod · · Score: 1

      > I've often thought the Neilson families either hand picked to reflected the desired outcome

      That had occurred to me, but even with the shadiness of corporations I don't think this is true. They would probably want to know what the customers really do want so that they can put that on & be able to charge more for commercials.
      Of course, they could just say that a show gets a lot of viewers and charge more anyway, therefore doing less work. Hmm. Damn, I just totally cancelled my own argument. Oh well.

  57. Re:Of course they do by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I liked you better when you trolled using the buzzword generator!

  58. Ok, how does this work by Microsift · · Score: 1

    If I'm changing the channel, obviously I am watching TV, but I leave my TiVo on all of the time, is the channel I'm watching last going to get a boost because I left my TiVo on all night?

    --
    My other sig is extremely clever...
    1. Re:Ok, how does this work by stevel · · Score: 1

      Actually, your TiVo is on all the time - it doesn't know whether or not the TV is on.

      So to be useful, they need to ignore information about units where no remote button has been pressed in some period of time (perhaps the 30 minutes it uses now to decide whether or not to ask you about recording suggestions.) Since the typical TiVo user DOES use the remote (to skip ads, if nothing else), this should work fairly well.

    2. Re:Ok, how does this work by Lil'wombat · · Score: 1

      I can see it working on two levels: It could aggregate the thumbs up thumbs down ratings or it could aggregate the season passes and scheduled records you request. Which I think would be great.

      --

      Truth: If it's not one thing, it's another

    3. Re:Ok, how does this work by stevel · · Score: 1

      The standard logging TiVo does is just remote button presses. Thumbs data and season passes wouldn't be a part of this in general. I do know that TiVo has, in the past, release data on which new shows had been most often added to Season Passes, but I don't know if they got this from button press logging or actually looking at the SP list. My guess is the button press log.

      A few months ago, TiVo enabled, on an invite-only and opt-in basis, the ability to collect individual data for use with Nielsen monitoring.

  59. Electronic Privacy who cares?-Privacy grab. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I suggest you read this book before you start slapping privacy advocates around. Privacy is always lost through the "small stuff" as you put it. Less attention is drawn that way, as opposed to wholesale, "take no prisoners" grabs. Everyone is not only keen to give their privacy away, they look down upon anyone who advocates that "having privacy" should be the natural state.

  60. Well Slap My Ass and Call Me 'Neilsen' by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That is all.

  61. Mod this up! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Mod it up as informative, please

  62. As a Tivo owner, I like this by Gunzour · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Two major things to point out to those who will complain about the invasion of privacy: 1) Tivo says the info will be anonymous, and I believe them as that is all networks and advertisers are interested in anyway. 2) Tivo does allow you to opt-out from even anonymous data collection if you call up their customer service number.

    I like it because I think it will show several interesting things about viewing habits. I think they will find that quality shows tend to have more loyal viewers than cheaper programming. I think they will also find that Tivo owners *do* watch some commercials, and that commercials are much more likely to be watched if they are *good*. I would hope than advertisers are smarter than we give them credit for, and I expect they won't mind, for example, if men fast forward past commercials for women's products.

  63. Give me choice - and we all win by gsfprez · · Score: 2, Insightful

    They are clearly stating that they are not going down to a single person... so there is no issue here.

    in fact, all that can happen from this is a) increase revenue/profits for a kick-ass outfit like TiVo (we're still sorta in a capitalist society here, aren't we?) b) reduce my bill.

    Both are a win.

    Hell, if they wanted to identify it down to me (Nielsen?) and charge me nothing for the service.. i'd be up for that.

    but that's me. If you'd not be down with that, then they should not have any right to do that.

    and since they are not, this is a GOOD news story, not a BAD news story.

    --
    guns kill people like spoons make Rosie O'Donnell fat.
  64. Re:Good for us by netringer · · Score: 5, Funny

    If the TiVo viewing data really gets distributed there will be MUCH better ratings for /. TV like Star Trek(s), Red Dwarf, Blackadder, The Office, Buffy,... and the stuff on TechTV and the Sci-Fi channel.

    Nerd viewing habits will be a force to be reckoned with.
    Don't write letters to networks and advertisers - VOTE for your favorite shows with your TiVo!

    --
    Ever dream you could fly? Get up from the Flight Sim. I Fly
  65. If your worried about tracking... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...(or don't want to pay the subscription) just build a MythTV system.

  66. This is a good thing by Foxone · · Score: 1

    Why? As any of you ever wanted to be polled by Nielsen and other stats companies? I believe Tivo will be able to make stats better than Nielsen boxes especially when people leave the TV open even when they do not watch. I welcome the fact that advertisers will see that I thumbed down 'John (douchbag) Edwards crossing over' and regularly watch StargateSg1 or the Discovery chanel... I wish everything I watch and thumbs up or down was actually used by these stats companies so they can get rid of crap shows (like edward's)

  67. Credit card debt. by Andy+Dodd · · Score: 1

    "TiVo knows that I make more than $155.88/year, but I haven't given them an indication of how much more."

    That isn't even a guaranteed number. :)

    --
    retrorocket.o not found, launch anyway?
  68. If the data is aggregate, this is GOOD, people! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Aren't you sick of the Neilsen's having the final say on what survives on television? How many more seasons of Survivor or the Bechelor can you people take?

    I think Tivo should actually turn this into a ratings service that lists the most popular shows for Tivo owners, or, IOW, most popular shows with people who have greater disposable income than most.

  69. Frankly, I'm shocked by LordOfYourPants · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I am completely stunned. I am hearing lines such as "It's aggregate data, so who cares."

    If you replaced the word "Tivo" with "Microsoft," I swear there would be a posse forming in some thread on this comments page as we speak to go down to their corporate HQ and burn every copy of XP they received with their PCs.

    I can just picture a story "Microsoft to track aggregate data on what mp3s people are listening to through a hook in Media Player in its latest software update."

    Do you picture replies saying "Well, if it maybe helps lower the price of the next OS release $15, I'm all for it." In all seriousness, can you picture replies like that on Slashdot?

    Why is Tivo given the benefit of the doubt? Is it just because it's such a geek-chic tool? Is it just a couple talking heads trying to fill a meme of "No no, it's aggregate, it's cool?"

    Tivo is making money as it is. If they do this, your subscription rates WILL NOT go down. You WILL NOT see better programming on tv as a result. You WILL NOT be able to resurrect your favourite show from Tivo data vs Nielsen data because Nielsen data is multi-tiered (It's not just a box they track, people fill in journals and other things).

    On top of that, the data they're getting is not "global" data, it represents the data taken from households where either a) expendable income is high, or b) expendable income is not high, but someone living there is a techie.

    What do you hope to gain from this? More directed ads? Didn't most of you people get a Tivo to skip the ads in the first place?

    1. Re:Frankly, I'm shocked by HarveyBirdman · · Score: 1
      On top of that, the data they're getting is not "global" data, it represents the data taken from households where either a) expendable income is high...

      Yeah, geez, I mean, what stupid advertiser looks for *that* demographic anyway? ;-)

      Chill, dude. Most of the Neilson comparisons was just theory and discussion. That's what we're here for, yes?

      --
      --- Ban humanity.
    2. Re:Frankly, I'm shocked by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Good luck on decoupling high expendable income and people that are on the fringes but just wanted the newest tech toy with their close to maxed out credit card.

      I guess the safe route would be to just market expensive tech things in general and hope it covers both types.

    3. Re:Frankly, I'm shocked by FattMattP · · Score: 4, Insightful
      If you replaced the word "Tivo" with "Microsoft," I swear there would be a posse forming in some thread on this comments page as we speak to go down to their corporate HQ and burn every copy of XP they received with their PCs.
      I'm sure they would. Microsoft has a track record of deception and underhandedness. They've shown time and again that they will use any means, even illegal ones, to further their own goals, irregardless of the consequences. They even have several legal rulings against them that prove it. Consequently the people here on Slashdot have a hair trigger when it comes to Microsoft.

      Tivo, on the other hand, has been very open and honest about their business and their hardware. They've never lied or attempted to be dishonest in any way. They've always been respectful of their cusotmers and made a good-faith effort to communicate with them. Also, they've respected the hacker community and the hacker community has respected them in turn. This has brought about a lot of great enhancements for the series one unit and the company has been good about listenting to their customers and what they want.

      Tivo has stated since day one that they collect informtation, detailed what information they collect, and have provided a way to opt out. They've also stated that they would probably sell the information at some later point. People have verified that Tivo is telling the truth in regards to what information they collect and send back to their servers.

      Tivo has earned most customers respect whereas Microsoft seems almost proud that they have not.

      --
      Prevent email address forgery. Publish SPF records for y
    4. Re:Frankly, I'm shocked by SnowDog_2112 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      "What do you hope to gain from this? More directed ads? Didn't most of you people get a Tivo to skip the ads in the first place?"

      How about a different question -- what do I fear to lose from this? Wow, they'll learn that 40% of the people in zip code 00000 that can afford a Tivo watch Survivor, or have season passes to Buffy. And I'm worried, why?

      --
      Not representing or approved by my company or anybody else.
    5. Re:Frankly, I'm shocked by msimm · · Score: 1

      Why is Tivo given the benefit of the doubt?

      I think maybe because of their history. Microsoft has gathered the ire of some in the technical community over time. So of course if this was Microsoft there would be a different response, but it has a history.

      --
      Quack, quack.
    6. Re:Frankly, I'm shocked by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      What useful purpose would be served by sending Microsoft the WinDOS equivalent of TV viewing data?

      Does Tivo collect any information behind our backs? Have they ever lied about their intent?

      These 3 questions dramatically alter the comparison such that there is only a vague and superficial similarity between the two entities. Microsoft isn't hated for simply the elements of your comparison that conform to what's being compared to. Microsoft is also hated for ~ 30 years of lies, abuse and dirty tricks.

      When evil people do innocuous things, OF COURSE THEY'RE GOING TO GET MORE SCRUTINY. Try buying a gun after you've been paroled.

      You bring up Microsoft in a remarkably simplistic and superficial manner. They long ago demonstrated that they don't deserve the benefit of the doubt.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    7. Re:Frankly, I'm shocked by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      >"It's aggregate data, so who cares."

      Anyone who can be identified from the "aggregate data" because they fit into extremely small classifications.

      For example, "Data Processing Professionals who own controlling interest in poultry farms in the 75642 zip code" would find me, and only me, and will almost certainly stay that way. So it's a poor example, but hopefully you get the idea.

      This kind of thing has really chaffed me at work though. The company would put out "anonymous" surveys, but you still were identified by your length of time at the company and/or your geographic location. For most people, that would place them in a large group, and they could enjoy nominal anonymity. But for others, that was every bit the identification as your name.

      So there's no problem with aggregate data when you only look at the samples with large populations, but I'll bet any selection criteria you apply, somewhere identifies an individual.
      A few years ago, just "Zip Code" alone would have meant me, or the residents of my family farm.

    8. Re:Frankly, I'm shocked by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I live in a zip code where I would very probably be the only person with a Tivo. So my rights to privacy are being protected differently than someone in the middle of San Francisco or wherever Tivos are popular.

    9. Re:Frankly, I'm shocked by linux11 · · Score: 1
      Tivo, on the other hand, has been very open and honest about their business and their hardware. They've never lied or attempted to be dishonest in any way.


      I consider the following three issues to be cases where TiVo has been very closed or dishonest about their business or their hardware. In my opinion, each is a lie or an attempt to be dishonest. Feel free to try to explain why you consider such actions to be acceptable.

      TiVo Lie #1: TiVo advertized "Season passes" as recording a program for an entire season regardless of if it changes time slots.

      Reality #1: A hick-up in availablity of a "line-up" may cause TiVo to auto-delete season passes. In my case, TiVo blamed this on my cable company (I don't have one, I get standard air) and then blamed it on Zap2It. Since both Chicago WGN Channel 9 and Zap2It are owned by the Chicago Tribune, I doubt one arm of the Trib forgot about the other. I also doubt that Zap2It programmed the TiVo to auto-delete season passes if there is a line-up hick-up.

      ---

      TiVo Lie #2: TiVo advertized that the dial-up feature of TiVo would not only provide guide data but also free updates to the TiVo software itself such that TiVo would continue to improve at no additional cost.

      Reality #2: Home Media Option costs $100 strictly for the software update. The cost of the ethernet adapter is in *addition* to the $100. Also, TiVo has artifically declaired that the software can only be activated on TiVo Series 2 despite the fact that they are aware of TiVo Series 1 devices with 9th Tee ethernet connections.

      ---

      TiVo Lie #3: TiVo stated when it first came out that it recognized the contributions that the GNU/Linux community had made to the creation of TiVo and they would honor not just the letter but also the spirit of the GPL.

      Reality #3: Series 2 hardware checks the signature on the kernel/initrd image restrict the TiVo hardware to use only TiVo compiled software. Since the spirit of the GPL clearly states that the kernel and other Free Software should remain modifable, the fact that TiVo purposily locks out modifed works from executing on TiVo is an attack on the spirit of the GPL. Also, since the GPL defination of "complette source code" as including the scripts used to control installation of the executable (of which the private key used for signing is part of TiVo's process of installing the kernel/initrd image), I believe TiVo is also violating the letter of the GPL. To date, the source code provided on the TiVo web site is not complette by the defination provided by the GPL as it does not contain everything needed to perform binary installation of the Free Software on a TiVo.
    10. Re:Frankly, I'm shocked by Zathrus · · Score: 1

      Issue #1 - sorry, but if you think that one part of a megacorp can't forget about another part of a megacorp, it just means you've never worked for a company with more than 100 people (if you have, then please tell me exactly what each and every one of those people are doing right now... oh, you don't know? So maybe something you do could negatively affect one of them, without either of you knowing about it... funny that).

      I've never seen a season pass auto-deleted, nor have I read about it on the TiVo forums. Could happen, but it'd be a bug. And a rare one at that.

      Oh, as a hint - the TiVo Customer Support people are generally clueless, as is most CS. Use the TiVo Community boards. You get much better help.

      Issue #2 - oh, so you didn't get any other software versions for free? If you're a current subscriber with a Series2 system then you just recently got v4.0 of the software for free. Older customers have gotten v1.1, v1.2, v1.3, v2.0, v2.5, v3.0, v3.1 (maybe), and v3.2 (maybe). All for free. I started out with v1.2 on my S1 boxes and saw the upgrades in functionality up through v3.2, and there were a lot.

      The HMO software functionality was never promised as part of TiVo. It is a value added capability and has nothing to do with the primary functionality. You don't want it, don't get it. Oh, and parts of it work just fine over a phone line too.

      Issue #3 - I suggest you talk to the FSF then. If TiVo were in violation of the GPL you can bet the FSF would be talking to them about it. As it is, TiVo's not in violation so the FSF isn't involved. Your interpretations of the GPL are incorrect.

  70. Re:Good for us by PD · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Mod that up. I hope that TiVo sells its data, because then some people who lack cluesticks might suddenly get one. I want TV execs to know that I watch shows like Babylon 5, Star Trek, stuff on TechTV, and so on. But so far, most of what they give us is "The Golden Girls" in a thousand different variants. Anything that lets someone know what I personally watch is a good thing.

  71. Help TiVo stay alive. Was: Opt Out Option by dfn5 · · Score: 1

    If the individual stats remain annonymous why would people opt out if the net result is that TiVo goes out of business and you are stuck with a box with no service. I personaly don't care and to be honest I thought they were doing this all along.

    --
    -- Thou hast strayed far from the path of the Avatar.
  72. Sell your Tivo! Build a MythTV box! by MrJerryNormandinSir · · Score: 1

    An open source project called MythTB really rocks!
    You should check it out! www.mythtv.org

    And.. I built one!

  73. the trend is clear by Tipton51 · · Score: 1

    The trend has already started. The media are already interweaving content and promotion. Soon there may be no commercials to skip over.

  74. stick it to the Nielsens... by The+Lynxpro · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Actually, TiVo reporting the aggregate viewing statistics was a *compelling feature* of the service to me. I HATE (repeat after me, HATE) the Nielsen's. I do not believe 6,000 homes accurately reflects the television viewership of this nation, especially when it depends on those people sitting down and logging their viewing experience in a journal. There have been far too many good television shows cancelled because the Nielsen "families" didn't watch it or chose to record it on their VCRs. There are 700,000 + TiVo subscribers versus 6,000 Nielsen homes. You tell me which one will have better statistics. Even if the Nielsens actually represent a larger overall base of the American market, the TiVo subscribers will actually represent the groups advertisers want to reach anyway (tech savvy Gen X and Gen Y, and babyboomers with money). Now if I could just do a total "thumbs down" to all of Cal Worthington's ads I'd be a happy camper...

    --
    "Right now, somewhere in this world, Scott Baio is plowing a woman he doesn't love," - Peter Griffin, *Family Guy*
    1. Re:stick it to the Nielsens... by The+Lynxpro · · Score: 1

      with that having been said, TiVo and the Nielsens have actually worked together in the past. Hopefully, TiVo used an old strategy page from Microsoft's playbook under the chapter of "embrace and extend" and will replace the Nielsens...

      --
      "Right now, somewhere in this world, Scott Baio is plowing a woman he doesn't love," - Peter Griffin, *Family Guy*
    2. Re:stick it to the Nielsens... by liam193 · · Score: 1

      So long as the rating information is kept somewhat anonymous, I see no harm in this as well.

      I am currious as to how this data might be utilized. I think it would be interesting to see ratings information that shows that TiVo viewers are far different from other viewers and it's better to put their programs on at odd hours of the day. Primetime shows probably won't change much, but wait until non-primetime changes based on TiVo recordings. With TiVo time-of-day and day-of-week timeslots mean nothing. Those shows don't have to fight over the best timeslots.

    3. Re:stick it to the Nielsens... by jratcliffe · · Score: 1

      >>

      Simple: the Nielsen families. TiVo owners are about as representative of America as Slashdotters; in other words, not very. Tivo owners are reasonably prosperous technophiles. Face it, this is still a gadget, and there's a reason why 99% of American households don't own one. Tivo data might be useful for advertisers who want to target young technophiles, but it's not much help for advertisers who want to get the 18-49 male macrosegment that matters so much.

    4. Re:stick it to the Nielsens... by bitrott · · Score: 1

      You insensitive bastard. Cal Worthington's dog spot needs the financial support he gets from doing commercials! It takes a lot of money to buy the meat... er... banannas... er... fish... er... what animal is it today?

    5. Re:stick it to the Nielsens... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I filled out the book for Nielsen for a month whata pain. Here in Buffalo we also have access to the Canadian channels. When I inquired why none of those channels showed up in the survey, (since a great number of us listen to them,) I was told that the Canadian data was purged as none of those companies paid to get it. Canadian AirFarce, This Hour has 22 min, and the National not to mention Hockey Night in Canada easily outdraw the American content. So much for the ratings business......

  75. Re:Trust the fox by hesiod · · Score: 1

    > You trusted the fox.

    Everyone is a "Fox," but you have to choose which ones you distrust the least to be in your pack.

  76. Customer data? Damn straight by CausticWindow · · Score: 2, Funny
    Anybody remember this:

    Mr. Iwanyk, 32 years old, first suspected that his TiVo thought he was gay, since it inexplicably kept recording programs with gay themes. A film studio executive in Los Angeles and the self-described "straightest guy on earth," he tried to tame TiVo's gay fixation by recording war movies and other "guy stuff."

    "The problem was, I overcompensated," he says. "It started giving me documentaries on Joseph Goebbels and Adolf Eichmann. It stopped thinking I was gay and decided I was a crazy guy reminiscing about the Third Reich."

    Not so sure the Tivo data is worth much.

    --
    How small a thought it takes to fill a whole life
  77. Re:1997 MIT study said aggregate data defeats priv by hesiod · · Score: 1, Insightful

    > 97 percent of the individuals in Cambridge whose data appeared in a data base which contained only their nine digit zip code and birth date could be identified with certainty

    First of all, I have never seen a 9 digit zip code. Secondly, and more importantly, the crucial data there is your birth date. If that data is not included in the TiVo information, this post means very little. If the BDate is in there, that's a problem.

  78. I'm actually in support of this... by steppin_razor_LA · · Score: 1

    As long as the data is kept on an anonymous level, I'm happy to see them sell back information on my watching patterns.

    TV ratings currently come from Nielsen surveys/boxes/etc. If you have ever participated in one of these, you know how ridiculous the process is.

    I want my favorite TV shows to have higher ratings so that they last more seasons.

    --
    Evolution: love it or leave it
  79. Not as anonymous as might you think by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    When the data is being sent back to Tivo from your Tivo, your unit serial number and IP address are also there. You are left to beleive that Tivo will use this information in an anonymous way.

    But lets say you are intested in watching shows about terrorism, religion, or related programming. You are innoscent until proven guilty, but that doesn't stop Ashcroft et al from asking Tivo to turn over their records of people who watch such programming. I know this is a worst case scenario, but anyone who understands databases should show some concern when companies pull things like this.

    I would really like to see the schema and sample data from their database before I would trust them with my viewing habits.

    I don't consider myself as too paranoid, but enough to know history and where the future of inforamtion and databases my end up.

    AC

    1. Re:Not as anonymous as might you think by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Always posting anonymous shows already that you are too paranoid. There is nothing here that will identify you individually whether you believe it or not.

  80. Someday when the Skip button goes away... by Goldenhawk · · Score: 1

    I read thru every decently-moderated posting above, hoping SOMEONE would make this comment, but noooooo.... the privacy gang took over. Anyway...

    It seems like every time this comes up, someone complains about the way the cable companies, media companies, etc. are just looking for an excuse to squash PVRs. (I own an UltimateTV unit, but the TiVo is the same...) I don't think I've watched a commercial during a delayed playback in the last year, unless I was just too busy getting a soda to grab the remote. That's gotta worry the content providers.

    So the REAL danger I see here is that the content providers will prove to themselves the reality of what's going on in PVR-land, and finally have a real excuse to push even harder for DRM and locking out the fast-forward and skip buttons. Okay, I'm already frustrated enough that I can't skip that stupid FBI warning at the front of a DVD, so the LAST thing I want is someone telling me I can't use the fast-forward button right this moment, because there's a paid Budweiser advertisement on, and by God I WILL have to watch it because Anheiser-Busch PAID for me to watch it. Even though I don't drink beer.

    So where are all the DRM versus PVR nuts? SOMEONE chip in here... tell me I'm not all alone...

    --
    --Brandon / Split Infinity Music

  81. I've got a bridge to sell you by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    While individuals will be anonymous
    . . . for now . . .

  82. They aren't selling your personal data. by Petersko · · Score: 1

    [i]Selling my personal data (even if it's anonymous) it's violation of my rights.[/i][br][br]They aren't even selling data in such a way as to say "This unknown individual watched these programs." This is about as invasive as putting traffic counters on roads you frequent. The whole point in aggregate data is that it isn't unduly swayed by one individual.

  83. If Tivo goes under, this becomes bad by alispguru · · Score: 1

    Here's a privacy policy I'd like to hear from a major corporation, just once:

    We view our collection of data about our customer base as both an asset and a liability.

    It is an asset in that we use it to generate aggregated data about you, and sell that data to people who want to sell you things.

    It is also a liability in that we got this data from you with a promise to never release it in detail, allowing others to see your individual habits and preferences.

    With that promise in mind, we repeat that we will never sell our data about you in a manner that allows you to be individually identified. If we ever go out of business, our last act as a corporation will be to destroy any indices that would enable that.

    --

    To a Lisp hacker, XML is S-expressions in drag.
    1. Re:If Tivo goes under, this becomes bad by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That doesn't go nearly far enough -- they shouldn't collect the information in the first place.

  84. Shouldn't be too hard to feed them noisy data by unfortunateson · · Score: 1

    Just have a 'bot watch for the red light on the TiVo, and the TV being on. If nobody's watching, and nothing's being recorded, change the channel every ten minutes to something random. Hit instant replay a buncha times.

    Race ya' to sourceforge to create the TiVoMonkey project.

    --
    Design for Use, not Construction!
  85. Unless they coallate it with by Jammer@CMH · · Score: 1

    credit reports, in which case they *do* know your income, pretty much.

    1. Re:Unless they coallate it with by realdpk · · Score: 1

      I've looked at all of my credit reports, I've yet to see anything on there to indicate my income. They might find out that I have a couple of credit cards and no debt.

      Anyways, they can't just request the credit report on a whim, and it'd show up on the credit report itself if they had.

    2. Re:Unless they coallate it with by endoboy · · Score: 1

      your income isn't on there, but reasonable clues as to your out-go are----monthly credit card spending; mortgage and/or monthly rent; student loans; car payment; etc...

      If your credit report indicates you have a pattern of spending $N,000 per month, one could make a reasonable inference that your income would be something on the order of 3*N.

      Not definitive, but good enough for most marketing decisions....

  86. (OT) Spike TV by David_W · · Score: 1
    While I have your attention, "The New TNN" is becoming "SpikeTV" - a network for men. Go tell them what YOU want to see, if you are a guy, of course. I hardly see how this could be a bad thing...

    Actually I just went there and told them what I don't want to see: that stupid black bar at the bottom of every show. If you also watch TNN, I'd encourage you to do the same. If they get enough comments saying it, they might listen.

    1. Re:(OT) Spike TV by Ctrl-Z · · Score: 1


      Not just the stupid black bar, but the stupid graphics they overlay over the stupid black bar just to distract you.

      --
      www.timcoleman.com is a total waste of your time. Never go there.
  87. Sounded better in my head by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yo mamma so fat, her viewing habits can be individually identified from Tivo's aggregate data...

  88. Commercials. Do you watch them? by Councilor+Hart · · Score: 1

    I don't live in America and am therefore not familiar with (american) commercials and their broadcasting. If I watch TV, I change (most of the time) the channel whenever there are commercials. Thank goodness, they don't vary the duration too much. Mostly I watch the public channel, without commercials. I really dislike commercials. If i don't want to buy your product, without you having to force it down my throat by flooding me with commercials, then i don't need to buy your product. I can't imagine someone watching voluntarily commercials. At least not without being paid for it. The only time when I see a commercial, is when I am too late, too early in switching or too lazy to find the remote. And with Tivo you can skip the commercials with one push of a button. (so says the article) So what's the value of the information they are selling? If the only commercials you watch are by accident. Or are Americans not concerned into getting lured to buy something they don't want or need?

  89. Re:How Tivo Ruined my life - A potentially true st by PhxBlue · · Score: 1

    I posted this to Usenet a while back. . .

    Let me guess, alt.tinfoil.hat.conspiracies?

    --
    !#@%*)anks for hanging up the phone, dear.
  90. Keep the public in the know by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "The machines also can study their users' recording habits..."

    Damnit, I don't wany my machines studying me.

    I'm just glad things like this come out in news stories (sometimes). I'm not one to don the tinfoil hat (yet), but these constant privacy intrusions in all sectors of life are wearing thin on my patience. Anything I buy on a CC winds up in a dozen databases, the grocery store gives me a little card so they can keep tabs on what I'm eating, and now Tivo wants everyone to know where and when I paused a recording.

    Companies should be held accountable for selling their customers out. (accountable at least in the court of public opinion). When people start caring that their information is being sold off to god knows who, they can decide with their checkbooks which companies they'll support.

    Anyone know of any websites that track this kind of information?

    "The habits of individual users will remain anonymous."
    Yeah, tell us another one, Tivo.

  91. Fine with me. by sootman · · Score: 1

    TiVo is a gift from God. ('specially wih a 120gb hd, aaaggghhhh) They can have my soul if they want it. :-)

    --
    Dear Slashdot: next time you want to mess with the site, add a rich-text editor for comments.
  92. Intent by mobileskimo · · Score: 1

    The problem with collecting data isn't that we fear it will be used a malicious way. Corpoartions aren't out to get you (That's what the Govment is for ;). They're out to get your money. The voice I think I'm hearing is the fear that they will use the data with money in mind, disregarding whether morally good or evil the results are. Whatever the result is to consumer privacy, it's inconsequential to them (unless the consumers respond unfavorably with their wallets).

    Even aggregate data. As long as you got a buck behind the motivation, you've no idea what kind of payload its carrying. It could be flowers. It could be poison gas. They don't care. As long green paper comes with it.

    Personally I don't own one of these. But I would be worried. The boxes are uniquely identifiable to a household. I would want proof before I either cry or smile. A sample with simple explanations of the columns would suffice. It would smooth relations with their customers, I would think they would want that.

    However if they are hiding the fact that they are selling individual information, this may be the statement to diffuse any incident should news leak out. "You knew about this. We announced we were selling this information. No we didn't give you a chance to see a sample to make sure. Trust us."

    Trust? Trust has nothing to do with money making corporations. Who are you kidding? They emulate trust... to get in your pockets maybe. Do you know TiVo? Does he live on your block? Do you know his kids? Do your kids mow his lawn? Does your dog know the scent of his crotch?

    --
    "Last one in is a rotten goblin!" - Kepp
  93. Re:1997 MIT study said aggregate data defeats priv by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    a) tivo doesn't use 9 digit zip codes in this info.
    b) they certainly don't send birthdays, at most they may separate into demographics such as 18-25,26-40, etc.

  94. The big deal is TiVo suicide. by raehl · · Score: 3, Funny

    "96.3 percent of our subscribers skip commercials."

    Oops.

    1. Re:The big deal is TiVo suicide. by Whatchamacallit · · Score: 1

      Because 96.3% of the commercials are really really stupid or I've seen them far too many times!

      When I see a new AFLAC duck commercial I actual rewind it and watch it a few times. This is an amazing marketing machine. Whoever does these ads should be getting paid big bucks!

      I've been known to rewind for other commercials as well. The TiVo scans so smooth during fast forward that I get a real good idea of the commercial content I am skipping. If I'm interested I actually stop and check it out. I found out about new upcoming shows this way that I'll want to record with the TiVo. Just recorded "44 minutes: The North Hollywood Shootout" that way!

      Sure I could use the commercial skip remote control hack but why bother? In less then a minute I can blast past the commercials. It's a godsend for those shows where they put far too many commecials on! You know the 1/2 hour show that goes an hour due to all the flipping commercials!

      I would like them to track my data and maybe deliver advertising content to me but it has got to be acurate! I've been known to watch their informercials like the BMW Films, etc. That one with James Brown was really quite good! Commercials will be dead soon enough.

      The wave of the future will be custom infomercials for stuff you might actually be interested in buying! Heck if I turned on my TiVo and it flashed a not too annoying alert box on the screen to let me know about new content. Then gave me the option to go look at it, it would be alright.

      But the key is the content has GOT to be what I want to know about! i.e. how about an in depth Apple Computer ad or some new FireWire hard disk with 20 minutes of in depth coverage on the device and why it's better then the competition. Etc, point being it's got to be stuff I am actually interested in. They have the technology to target more accurately but they are not doing it properly.

      If the content is some new cooking pot with holes in the top to pour out the water, then I am DEFINITELY NOT INTERESTED! What's the big deal with putting a strainer in the sink and pouring ones pasta into it? I know people who bought this stupid thing and then realized how stupid it was! A strainer works better! After pasta has been sitting for a few minutes, you need to run hot water over it to loosen up the starch. Letting it sit in a semi-dry pan will turn it into glue as it cools!

      I suppose I answered my own question. I know people who bought junk like this along with the thigh master, situp curler, 7 minute Abs, etc. America is full of suckers who drool over these commercials and buy expensive stuff they don't need and will only use once before plopping it in the attic for a future tag sale date. These are the 1D10T's that the marketing machine is targeting!

  95. Oxymoron alert by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sorry, but saying simultaneously that "Tivo has stated since day one that they collect information" and "[Tivo have] always been respectful of their customers" to me is an oxymoron -- the two statements just don't make sense together. Any company that collects information about its customers, that studies us as if we were bugs under a microscope, is being disrespectful of its customers and certainly isn't a company I would want to do business with. Sure, companies can legitimately study themselves, their own sales stats and what have you to see what sells, but as soon as they cross over the line into studying their customers, they have started disrespecting their customers, and such privacy-intrusive conduct should be illegal. I don't care if it is collected or stored individually, in aggregate, or on the moon. As a customer, I always want my decisions, my purchases, my conduct to be completely anonymous. The alternative doesn't benefit ME in any way. I don't buy the arguments that this leads to better marketing -- it leads to worse marketing. Not only is the whole premise offensive, but predictive marketing is by its nature completely faulty.

  96. Network employees get the hint... by msimm · · Score: 1

    Hmmmmm, maybe what we need is more T&A?

    --
    Quack, quack.
  97. This is probably a good thing by BlueTooth · · Score: 1

    This makes it so that anyone with a Tivo becomes like a nealson family. This is good. Now watching TV is like voting for what you like (ideally). Sort of like when the music charts went from being determined by what critics say are the top ten to actually being based on CD sales.

    --
    SPAM
  98. What's the Emoticon for Righteous Indignation? by mykepredko · · Score: 1

    Wasn't the tracking/selling of viewer habits something that Tivo promised not to do when it first came out? I seem to remember this was an issue when Tivo first came out (along with its need for a phone line to download programming information, there were concerns it would phone back out and pass along personal information).

    I love the last quote from Martin Yudkovitz: We want to embrace the opportunity to help advertisers and broadcasters better understand the current and future impact of DVR so they can adapt content and advertising strategies to this new medium. If they want to help advertisers and broadcasters, why are they selling the information?

    Of course it might not be a bad thing; if they base the advertising that's passed to me on which commercials I don't fast forward through, it will be 24-7 of Victoria's Secret commercials - Party at my house, dudes!

    myke

  99. Selling info? Good idea! by Tsu+Dho+Nimh · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Taking the devil's side on this:

    "Aggregate" data by 5-digit zip code is not enough to personally identify you. It's like watching log-ins by IP address. You get liumped with everybody else who was watching Smallville or Buffy reruns.

    Marketing is ESSENTIAL to support broadcast TV as we know it. Someone has to pay for all those production costs, and right now it is the advertisers. I like it that way. TIVO and other time-shifting technologies scare advertisers and TV producers because they see costs rising and revenues dwindling.

    Companies waste a lot of money on advertising because they don't know what commercials "work" (or are at least watched). If they could get fast feedback, maybe the really stupid and pointless commercials would go away faster. If they could get better at spotting what ads are getting viewed/skipped on what shows, maybe the shows wouldn't go away for lack of advertisers.

  100. Nice and psychological by siskbc · · Score: 2, Interesting
    And of course the myth(debunked) that advertising has any impact on sales. You believe that the magazine you pay for has value, so you pay for it. The advertisers believe you will pay attention to advertising in a vehicle that has value and also pay for it

    I love the "I paid more for it so it must be better" effect. My favorite example (outside of IT purchasing practices) was a weight loss formula sold on TV. Their main justification for charging $150/bottle was that you wouldn't pay that if it didn't work. Nice and circular argument, and I suspect lost on the public. And obviously they find suckers.

    I expect, as you state, it's similar for newspapers and their advertisers, so they charge a token cost at the newsstand.

    --

    -Looking for a job as a materials chemist or multivariat

    1. Re:Nice and psychological by Mundocani · · Score: 1

      That effect is absolutely real. Years ago I worked for a startup company writing software for managing doctor's offices. It wasn't especially complicated, but marketing wanted to charge what seemed to us as a really high price of $3000.00 a copy for it. As high as it was, this price was a couple thousand cheaper than our competitors. We actually had trouble selling it because doctors believed that it must be of poorer quality since it cost so much less. It's purely psychological, but the effect is entirely real.

    2. Re:Nice and psychological by Artifex · · Score: 1
      I expect, as you state, it's similar for newspapers and their advertisers, so they charge a token cost at the newsstand.


      I suspect it's a lot to do with the fact that they want provable numbers of readers, which is hard to do with these freebie weeklies you see in stands everywhere.

      Also, bookstores and magazine stands are not in the habit of carrying things they can't make any money from, so to increase availability, they have to give the carriers a reason not to just throw the bundle that comes out into the street for the homeless people.

      Speaking of homeless people, if you put your newspaper out for free, you can bet that a lot of copies are going to be used for unintended purposes, like keeping people warm at night. Charging a token amount just keeps them from walking up and taking stacks at a time.

      By the way, anyone charging more than a token amount for their newspaper is probably cashing in on monopoly power. What makes a Sunday paper with fewer pages than the Saturday paper "worth" 2 or 3 times as much? They know people have no choice but to pay it if they want a paper and there's no competition, and peak demand is highest on Sunday. If anything, they could claim that Sunday's revenues from advertising and sales subsidize the rest of the week's production.

      --
      Get off my launchpad!
    3. Re:Nice and psychological by Lord_Dweomer · · Score: 1
      That would be Leptoprin. I swear, that is one of the many commercials on tv today that makes me want to physically assault the ad agency who made it. Don't even get me started on the desperate, pathetic fools who actually fell for this. This type of viral marketing is EVERYWHERE. One of the big reasons I am trying to get into the advertising industry is so I can hopefully in the distant future start my own ad agency and fight this kind of crap with classy advertizing. My rule for clients will be "If you have to trick people into buying your product, we're not interested in your business." Call the companies that do this and let them know just what kind of scum they are.

      --
      Buy Steampunk Clothing Online!
  101. This is not a horrible thing... by EvanTaylor · · Score: 2, Interesting

    The same demographics that buy tivos are the ones not targetted well by ads or tv shows (imo). And honestly Id like more programming that targets ME, and I wouldnt mind ads for things I would want to buy.

    Lets see more shows like farscape, firefly, who's line is it anyway, futurama, etc.

    --
    Sleep is for the weak.
  102. Here's your chance guys . . . by Vinnie_333 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    . . . they're sampling the programs that are being recorded. Record your favorite shows! Even if you're watching them live! If they would have sold this data last year we could have saved Firefly, Futurama, and Farscape.

    --

    "We shall party like the Greeks of old! You know the ones I mean." - HedonismBot
  103. The MAF. by Elvisisdead · · Score: 1

    Just to add a little more interest to the conversation, the +4 number generally corresponds to a tract/block (I can't remember which) number from the US Census Bureau. The USPS maintains something called the MAF (Master Address File) that contains a list of every address in the US. The MAF is constantly updated by the Census Bureau through their ongoing surveying efforts (they do surveys more than every 10 years). The MAF doesn't contain personal information (names, etc.) but your address is in there.

    --

    "Want in one hand and spit in the other and see which one fills up first." - My Dad
  104. Lack of consensus generally is the problem by swb · · Score: 1

    Am I the only one who thinks that the extreme "privacy" fringe is doing a lot to discredit legitimate privacy concerns.

    Yes and no.

    They would counter that they have to be 100% opposed to the marketers, because the marketers will stop at nothing less than total invasion of privacy. And true or not, in pursuit of the almighty dollar, we've seen marketers do some pretty appalling things.

    The bigger problem is that no one is willing to work for a consensus ON ANY ISSUE, and this "total victory at all costs" mentality makes everything into a zero-sum game requiring aboslute zealotry. Microsoft isn't content with most of the market because they fear their competitors will try to run them out of business, pro-choicers aren't content with mostly legal abortion because they're afraid that anti-abortion foes won't stop there, and so on and so on.

    Everything has been ratcheted up to this zero-sum, winner-take-all level and it's really hard to back down because if your opponent won't, you've effectively lost everything.

    It doesn't help that even when people are seeking consensus, they utilize zero-sum rhetoric -- if you're against affirmative action, you're a card-carrying KKK member, if you're for gay rights you're a moral degenerate who can't be trusted with children, and so on.

    We've lost the ability to reason and see the middle ground.

  105. Woman's Products? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Thank Root AT&T finally gave the axe to Carrot Top. But every time I see the "1-800-Collect Angel", I think it's a tampax commercial. She's sterile and has wings.

  106. Re:1997 MIT study said aggregate data defeats priv by lifey · · Score: 1
    First of all, I have never seen a 9 digit zip code. Secondly, and more importantly, the crucial data there is your birth date. If that data is not included in the TiVo information, this post means very little. If the BDate is in there, that's a problem.
    You have NEVER seen a 9 digit zip code? Do you get mail? ZIP+4 (12345-6789) has been around quite a while now, and except for an occasional letter from my mom, everything has my ZIP+4 code on it now. Any many people have already pointed out that for a lot of people, that the ZIP+4 code has the possibility to be tracked directly to your house address. While I agree that most of these data miners would rather have your birtdate then your street address, I think they will take what they can get.
  107. Anonymity by bagofbeans · · Score: 2, Interesting

    The problem with Tivo still remains that although they make 'anonymity' noises now, they can de-anonymize any time they choose. Right now, the user base is ramping up, and so Tivo is very careful not to upset people. When the user base is steady, the situation is likely to be different.

    I will only belive Tivo's privacy posture if the data is stored anonymously as opposed to simply used anonymously. The only reason they can possibly have to store user data now is because they are effectively reserving the right to de-anonymize later for business purposes.

    There is much info on Tivo privacy; one link is http://www.privacyfoundation.org/privacywatch/prin t.asp?id=62&type=0

    As a last point, the UK Data Protection Act insists the people-data databases declare data use on forming. If the data use is changed (eg info can now be sold, before not so) then the historical data must be scrapped. That theoretically protects against data misuse by collecting under false pretenses, or complete about turns on privacy statements that have happening in USA.

  108. Re:1997 MIT study said aggregate data defeats priv by hesiod · · Score: 1

    > You have NEVER seen a 9 digit zip code?

    Haha, I'll prove YOU wrong! I'm... err.. wait, yeah 9... Why was I thinking 10 digit? Okay, you're right that I have seen them before, but still, I rarely see them. Probably helps that my ZIP (26003) has fewer addresses in it than, say, 90210 (the DIP code).

  109. Yeah right... by CGP314 · · Score: 1

    I keep waiting for movie theaters to drop the ticket price now that I have to watch commercials instead of soundless slides. It makes me mad that I have to pay ten bucks and watch horrible matrix/poweraid commercials. One or the other please.

  110. Awesome! by tm2b · · Score: 1

    I think this is great - it means that TiVo users, who as early adopters of technology tend to have tastes more like mine, will have a greater say in what shows get produced and kept on the air!

    Perhaps with this, Firefly would not have been cancelled...

    --
    "It is our blasphemy which has made us great, and will sustain us, and which the gods secretly admire in us." - Zelazny
  111. Overlooked point... by tm2b · · Score: 1

    Perhaps ZIP+4 resolves to just a few people, but the TiVo is only told your 5-digit zip... TiVo, Inc. could correlate it with mailing addresses I s'pose, but I doubt that they do, it would generate an absurd data file and could not be honestly called "aggregate."

    --
    "It is our blasphemy which has made us great, and will sustain us, and which the gods secretly admire in us." - Zelazny
  112. See the thing I don get is. by TheAwfulTruth · · Score: 1

    When any tiny little perceived "freedom" or "privacy" infraction comes up, /. turns into a 5000 lb chicken little. EXCEPT when it comes to the TIVO. It's like everyone is all against [whatever] as long as it's not something that /. actually likes and uses from a product standpoint. Then it's all "I'm perfectly fine with this", and "Maybe this is a good thing".

    The philosophical whiplash is threatening to tear my head off.

    I actually agree with you, it's the other 99% of the time where XXX is spying on you they are evil, evil, evil that gets to be tiring, then this...

    --
    Contrary to popular belief, coding is not all free blow-jobs and beer. Those things cost MONEY!
    1. Re:See the thing I don get is. by goldfndr · · Score: 1
      You are overgeneralizing the "freedom"/"privacy" issues.

      This "privacy" issue is specifically about anonymous aggregated data, as opposed to personal data.

      As an example, knowing that 5% of people in a particular ZIP code leave their curtains open at night might not be immediately useful to a peeping tom.

      --
      Copyrights, Patents, Trademarks: temporary loans from the Public Domain, not real property ("intellectual" or otherwise)
    2. Re:See the thing I don get is. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      When any tiny little perceived "freedom" or "privacy" infraction comes up, /. turns into a 5000 lb chicken little. EXCEPT when it comes to the TIVO. It's like everyone is all against [whatever] as long as it's not something that /. actually likes and uses from a product standpoint. Then it's all "I'm perfectly fine with this", and "Maybe this is a good thing".

      Maybe it's because we're not hypocrites?

      Look, I'm the first to yell loudly when a company violates privacy in a major way. But, Tivo has been upfront and straight about what it is they do from the word go. They have one of the most comprehensive privacy policies I've ever seen, and the Tivo hackers have verified that yes, the software does indeed do *exactly* what the privacy policy says it does. It really does only send anonymous info unless you "opt in". The people who work at Tivo have been totally straightforward and honest about the fact that yes, they collect anonymous data, and the company has *always* had an opt-out ability that extends right down to the box itself. If you opt out, they send a code to your box that turns the data collection off at the box, instead of simply deleting it on the back end.

      It's one thing to be all gung ho for privacy, but when a company actually pays attention and does it RIGHT, well, then you just have to give them props for it, yeah?

  113. This sounds to me like a Good Thing (TM) by Chunky+Kibbles · · Score: 1

    For once, advertisers are in danger of targeting content, as opposed to merely making it more offensive and flashy in the hopes of getting my attention.

    I currently run adzapping proxies and spamfilters. But that's because the ads are offensive, obnoxious, and almost never what I want.

    If ads were suddenly something that might hold my interest [by way of example, I do actually click on Penny-arcade ads sometimes], then it's a Good Thing. I click them, everyone benefits. But that's because they're what I'm interested in.

    For once, it seems that ads might be sensible. Does anybody lose out here? You already have no privacy - and there's a chance that this is being used in a good way for a change.

    Yes, I understand that TV != Internet, but my point still holds.

    Gary (-;

  114. Re re re re by Schezar · · Score: 1

    If you don't watch any advertiing at all, then how do you know when a new show is on?

    I often don't. I pick through the listings sometimes for things that interest me, and I'll sometimes hear about a "new show" from others who watch it.

    If something's worth seeing, I'll find out about it eventually. I'm in no hurry.

    --
    GeekNights!
    Late Night Radio for Geeks!
  115. TechTV bought this data from TiVo by NetPoser · · Score: 0

    Leo of TechTV said they bought a *Report* from one showing of "The Screensavers". He said TechTV couldn't afford to do this for every show but he did mention the value of this data.

    It was basically just xx% of TiVo views FF thur this commercial or that segment etc...

    Very good stuff.

    If we all FF'd thru the crappy commercials the advertiser's would create ones we'd be willing to watch. I don't know about you but I scan thru commercials at "3 arrows" and when something catches my attention I stop and view it.

  116. This is a good thing by curtlewis · · Score: 1

    I'm all for privacy, but not to the point of needless paranoia. TiVo selling this aggregate information is a good thing.

    It delivers REAL statistics. This means the decision makers have better information about what shows to keep and what shows to drop. This also provides better information to advertisers.

    Most of us have learned to tune out ads because they so rarely advertise something we're interested in. I'm not in the field of advertising, but if nearly every ad I saw was based on my interests, I'd probably watch more ads and hell, I might actually buy more of their product. Why? Because it applies to me and while it is largely computerized, at least SOME effort was put into determining WHAT to send to me, as opposed to the buckshot approach of spam.

  117. I'm fine with it if... by Morologous · · Score: 1

    it will keep the broadcasters, production companies, and networks off my back about recording their shows, or skipping commericials. If it appeases them to know that I watch the West Wing and live in Columbia, then so be it. I haven't lost anything. Just let me keep my Tivo.

  118. Caveat Emptor , TiVo and Hacking by securitas · · Score: 1


    From my rejected post late last night:

    Today TiVo begins selling information about its customers' viewing habits to advertisers and others. Two years ago TiVo admitted it had plans to sell subscriber information - it looks like that day is finally here. This should be interesting if only due to the new TiVo hacking book about to be published.

  119. Re:Good for us by Alien+Being · · Score: 1

    So what happens if they conclude that "Tivo owners tend to skip ads" and "Star Trek viewers tend to use Tivo"?

  120. Re:Good for us by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Give me "The Golden Girls" over Star Trek anyday.

  121. Are you people insane by Islington_66_81 · · Score: 1, Insightful

    This is in no way a good thing. In fact its very very very bad, and while it is in itself not an invasion of privacy it will lead a great deal of invasion, of privacy that is. Even though the data is annonoumous they still get zipcodes which means that the people tivo sells your info to will be mailing you huge masses of junk mail specificly tailored to the viewing habits of everyone in your zipcode. And yes this will deffinitaly happen as it has most certainly happen before. Companies have no respect for the indvidual and never will.

  122. Re:Good for us by amunter · · Score: 1

    Good point.

    Depending on the type of data they get, however, it might mean that they will start making better ads. I have a ReplayTV, and I skip quite a few ads, but there are a few that I actually watch. I only watch them once during a show usually, though, cause seeing them every 5 minutes can make even the most fun ad tiresome.

  123. Re:Mod Parent Up! Good Use of Footnote! by qtp · · Score: 1

    While not the most elegant post I've seen, it is informative and he used a properly formatted footnote.

    --
    Read, L
  124. Re:Good for us by netringer · · Score: 1
    So what happens if they conclude that "Tivo owners tend to skip ads" and "Star Trek viewers tend to use Tivo"?
    Shhhh! THAT would be a secret until somebody hip to it put it into a one page Executive Summary for the MBAs.

    The truth is really the opposite. There are so many commercials on the programs on Discovery Channels - History Channel, Discovery Wings, etc, that the shows are a total waste of time if you can't FF past the ads. I discovered this fact when I recommended some shows on Discovery Wings to TiVo-less friends and they replied that they are unwatchable due to the flood of commercials. I think the useful content time on those channels is in the 20 minutes per half hour range. At some tolerance point on those shows
    value of useful content < value of time it takes to acquire content.
    Because these channels are otherwise unwatchable they may someday find if they ignore the TiVo users they they have no other viewers left.
    --
    Ever dream you could fly? Get up from the Flight Sim. I Fly
  125. Re:Good for us by nonetheless · · Score: 1
    Isn't the opposite likely to happen?

    Geek + Babylon 5/Star Trek/Anime/etc. = High TiVo ratings = TV execs know that ads on that show skipped = No ad revenue = Show cancelled.

    Non-geek + Nth varient of Golden Girls = Low TiVo ratings, high traditional ratings = Advertising absorbed = Ad revenue = New this season on ABC, "N+1 varient of Golden Girls!!"

  126. Aggregate vs Individual data makes no difference. by cwsulliv · · Score: 2, Interesting

    While I have no objection to Tivo selling aggregate data to marketers by ZIP code (at least as long as it's only the 5-digit code), the fact that they can collect the data at all is problematic. All it takes now under the US Patriot Act is a simple request by a government agency for a surreptitious record of an individual's viewing habits. Under the proposed Total Information Awareness program, the viewing habits of every Tivo subscriber would automatically be transmitted to the government.

  127. Release ALL the data on ripping this open. by mrmeval · · Score: 1

    I know that tivo has been opened up but only some of the information has been released.

    Well, if this is their tactic, please allow users of tivo an answering tactic.

    Neilson did not get it's data for free and neither should tivo.

    --
    I'd go on a Vegan diet but the delivery time from Vega is too long. --brownkitty
  128. Build a filter device if you don't like it by John+Jorsett · · Score: 2, Interesting

    If you're seriously concerned about it, figure out the format of the data Tivo sends in (some Tivo hacker may have already done it for you), interpose an old computer with Linux between it and the phone line, and filter out the stuff you don't want it to send in. Or if you're really adept, perhaps you could find a way to insert a filter program in the Tivo itself, and save the extra hardware. After seeing what Tivo hackers have done in the past, I have to think either of these approaches is possible.

  129. But I never turn my TiVo off........ ?? by mojotooth · · Score: 1

    Okay, so they're collecting information on what I'm watching with my TiVo. Great. I hope they use it to make sure that more programs that I like (Firefly, etc) stay afloat while more retarded programming gets axed.

    One thing, though. When I "power down" my TV viewing system, I do it by shutting off my television and stereo receiver and walking away. The Tivo stays happily on whatever channel it was on, thereby "viewing" whatever show is on between then and when I next turn it on. Unless something gets recorded in the meantime, for which it will have to change channels.

    So I suppose I better change the channel right before I turn the system off, in order to artificially boost the ratings of whatever network I happen to be watching? What if this is the usage model of a million different people?

    --
    -- Mojo Tooth : exploring our world as only an idiot can.
  130. But so far, most of what they give us is "The Gold by zakezuke · · Score: 1

    But so far, most of what they give us is "The Golden Girls" in a thousand different variants. Anything that lets someone know what I personally watch is a good thing.

    Great, then they can collect the data on most popular 2nd time around shows and can use this market anal to create new shows like.

    1. Golden Girls the next generation
    2. Designing Babylon 5
    3. Blanch the Vampire slayer
    4. Delta Scape [yes, Suzanne Sugarbaker gets worm hole technology and is directly responcible for uniting the Scarins(sp) and PeaceKeepers on a holy war to destroy earth).

    --
    There is no sanctuary. There is no sanctuary. SHUT UP! There is no shut up. There is no shut up.
  131. Re:Good for us by PD · · Score: 1

    I need a TiVo for Slashdot so I can skip comments that contain unpleasant and painful truth. Back to plan B.

    1) Take over the world
    2) Force the networks to hire JMS and finish Crusade
    3) Profit!!!

  132. Re:But I never turn my TiVo off........ ?? by Mundocani · · Score: 1

    After Price is Right ends in the morning, I turn off the TV and walk away. I guess Tivo would figure that I really like CBS's soap operas since I seem to watch all of them every day. Hopefully they can figure out that I haven't touched the remote and am therefore not watching TV, but I doubt it. They just think that I watch a lot of "The Hunky and the Stupid" or whatever comes on later in the morning.

  133. Cool, save Farscape? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I've opted in on all the TiVo collect my info. As long as the info is group info who cares? Maybe networks will ditch BS Nielsen ratings. If they had real info on what people watched maybe Farscape would have gotten it's final season.

  134. Re:Good for us by Chester+K · · Score: 1

    If the TiVo viewing data really gets distributed there will be MUCH better ratings for /. TV like Star Trek(s), Red Dwarf, Blackadder, The Office, Buffy,... and the stuff on TechTV and the Sci-Fi channel.

    It's modded up as funny, but it's actually true. Not only can TiVo determine which shows are being watched, but they've in the past released statistics as to which parts of shows are watched the most.

    TiVo is the Neilsen of the 21st century.... except much better; now there's a much larger sample to draw from, meaning the numbers are more accurate, and there's less chance of a sleeper hit slipping by unnoticed.

    --

    NO CARRIER
  135. Almost true... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Furthermore, your actual thumbs-up/thumbs-down choices aren't uploaded -- just what you watch.

    Not *entirely* true. The thumbs data isn't sent by default, granted. But Tivo can, without opting you in or anything, tell your (and every other) Tivo to send it's thumbs data up to them. They've done it before in fact. Back when you had version 2.5 of software, you may not have noticed one of your daily calls take a little longer than usual. What they did was get all the thumbs data off all the boxes. Why?

    Well, for software version 3.0, they added a weighting system to the suggestions. From the aggregate thumbs data, they were able to find out things like "90% of people who like the Twilight Zone also like The Outer Limits" and they built a nice weighting mechanism into the suggestions for the 3.0 software to use this kind of info. It works rather well, actually. A lot of people noticed a dramatic improvement in suggestions with 3.0. A lot more technical (and vocal) people derided this adjustment because their suggestions suddenly got worse. Why? Because those people had adjusted their thumbs such that they made the Tivo have a desired outcome. They'd adapted to the thumbs to force the suggestions to behave the way they wanted instead of letting the Tivo adapt to them by giving the Tivo their honest "thumbs opinion" of shows. It was a long heated arguement on the Tivo forums.

    In any case, since then they have recalibrated the weightings at least once to my certain knowledge, but probably more. Recalibrating involves, you guessed it, getting all the thumbs data again.

    But you're correct in that the the suggestions are calculated client side, and that thumbs are not sent normally.

  136. How big are zipcodes in the US? by EnglishTim · · Score: 1

    How big are zipcodes in the US?

    Postal codes here in the UK have about 15-30 houses in them. I'd imagine that any Tivo users in the UK would be effectively completely identifiable because they'd be the only Tivo owners in their postcode...

  137. Bad data? by zero_offset · · Score: 1

    I've always wondered how reliable TiVo data is. Clearly the history of recorded programs is going to be good, but if they track which programs you watch "live" I'm willing to bet most of the data is garbage, because nobody turns their TiVo off. I just power off the TV and the stereo, and the TiVo runs 24x7. That means when it's done recording Formula One, it hangs around on Speed Channel picking up every redneck NASCAR talkshow until Enterprise comes on the following day and forces a channel-change (for example). Just a thought.

    --

    Slashdot quality declines as the number of hot grits posts decreases. - Provolt's Law, Apr-09-2005

    1. Re:Bad data? by DirkDaring · · Score: 1

      Thats a very good point. I do the same at my house with our units. I never turn it off, only the TV. I'm sure their plan still has merit, however. They can still track what shows people schedule to record, when you rewind, fast forward, etc.

  138. Hypocrite! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Tch...Everyone's a hypocrite. Except me.

  139. Not really. by BoomerSooner · · Score: 1

    You'd be surprised how difficult it is to make all data nontraceable. For example if you're doing aggregate data on a home (ltc facility) you have to be certain that if there is only one resident with parkinsons (unlikely) that when you show related data to parkinsons patients/residents it doesn't directly link to their meds (or whatever else it is your showing).

    It's far from status quo. Although we have been dealing with this for quite some time. HIPAA is both good and bad in my opinion. It's difficult to implement something like that without the stupid side effects (a la not reporting injuries to football players, etc).

    If you were the one being denied care, it would matter. However, that's the american way. Ignore it as long as it doesn't affect me. Sad really, I blame the republican "evil-doers" party.

    1. Re:Not really. by gmhowell · · Score: 1

      Perhaps it's my point of view. I work for a mixed IM/pediatrics group. We have to fill out tons of paperwork, and do lots of shit. But at the end of the day, we still share the same stuff with outside agencies as we did before. Of course, we had good policies in effect decades ago. Our compliance officers basically said "all we're doing is putting on paper what we've been doing forever".

      --
      Jesus was all right but his disciples were thick and ordinary. -John Lennon
  140. the real question is by NewToNix · · Score: 1
    who will controll the use made of the things I have purchased, i.e., do I own the data, and/or the hardware being used to collect the data, or does TIVO?

    I believe a person owns that which he controlls (what you can destroy you own). TIVO's opt out is not you in controll - it is you asking for a favor over something they claim to own - the collected data and the right to use the hardware to collect that data.

    So take controll, you bought the hardware and your data should belong to you (even in aggregate it is your data, to the extent that data derived from you is part of the aggregate).

    As to agreements made wherein TIVO retains the "right" to do the data collecting as part of purchasing the hardware: It should be no diffrent then purchasing a car or a microwave, if you want the warranty you do what they say, if you want total ownership you may remodel the thing to suit yourself, but lose any warranty.

    My Sig left me for another /. Sig

  141. True. by BoomerSooner · · Score: 1

    I think we're arguing the same point. We've known about HIPAA since '96(?) and have been very careful to focus on it since it was passed. Everyone else is crapping in their pants where we just undergo our regular audits.

  142. In completely unrelated news by Scroatzilla · · Score: 1

    Clear Channel now owns Britney Spears.