Slashdot Mirror


Adobe Is Helping Some 60 Companies Track People Across Devices (neowin.net)

Neowin reports of Adobe's recent announcement of its new Marketing Cloud Device Co-op initiative: The announcement of the new solution for tracking customers across devices was made at the Adobe Summit this week in Las Vegas to a digital marketing conference. According to an Adobe blog post released earlier this month citing Forrester, consumers are increasingly accessing multiple devices before making a purchase decision -- an average of 5.5 connected devices per person. This behavior creates a challenge for retailers, who cannot easily target people in their marketing campaigns, ultimately depending on Facebook or Google to track people instead of devices. Both Facebook and Google are able to do this job because of the massive amount of users logged into their ecosystems regularly, so most retailers have been opting to use those platforms as a way to reach potential customers. But Adobe's approach is to provide a platform agnostic solution acting as a glue between the world's biggest brands' own data management platforms.

In order for Device Co-op to work, each company that has joined the initiative will provide Adobe with "cryptographically hashed login IDs" and HTTP header data, which Adobe claims will completely hide the customer's identity. This data will be used to create groups of devices used by the same person or household, which will then be made available to all the members of the initiative so they can target people on different devices, instead of creating one customer profile per device, as can be seen from the example given in the image above. Until now, some 60 companies have joined the Adobe initiative, including brands such as Subway, Sprint, NFL, Lenovo, Intel, Barnes & Noble, and Subaru. Also, preliminary measurements made by Adobe indicate that Device Co-op could link up to 1.2 billion devices worldwide, based on the amount of accesses seen by current members. But it is important to note that the initiative is currently collecting data of U.S. and Canada users only.
Adobe is claiming the initiative will not disclose a user's identity to its members, including any personal data, but, given the recent Facebook and Cambridge Analytica scandal, many will be skeptical of those claims. Thankfully, Adobe is allowing users to completely opt out all of their devices from the services via this website.

6 of 66 comments (clear)

  1. Marketing by 110010001000 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    When are people going to realize that online marketing and advertising is a joke? The "targeted" ads I see are for things I have already bought.

    1. Re:Marketing by olsmeister · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Don't ever buy anything from an ad you see online. Ever.
      It's the only way to stop the madness.

  2. Opt out? by theweatherelectric · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Thankfully, Adobe is allowing users to completely opt out all of their devices from the services

    Why not opt in? If the service is valuable to me I'd want to opt in, wouldn't I?

    1. Re:Opt out? by Frosty+Piss · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Thankfully, Adobe is allowing users to completely opt out all of their devices from the services

      Why not opt in? If the service is valuable to me I'd want to opt in, wouldn't I?

      Oh come on, you know the answer. The service is extremely valuable, just not to you.

      But again, don't fool yourself. It's not smoke and mirrors to the average consumer, who will think this is fabulous. It's just that you are not the average consumer.

      Inside, most Facebook users *know* nothing is for free and Facebook is making money on them and their "demographic". They just don't really care.

      --
      If you want news from today, you have to come back tomorrow.
  3. So now Adobe wants to be the master gatekeeper? by jenningsthecat · · Score: 3, Insightful

    In addition to the stupidity of all those people out there who don't know and don't care about the danger this initiative represents, there is a fair measure of stupidity in big corporations signing up for Adobe to be their sole source for all that data.

    Just for a moment, let's adopt the worldview of power-hungry despotic corporations and the marketards that serve them. In the first place, how much less valuable is the anonymized data than the data that is traceable to specific, named people? I'd say it's a LOT less valuable, probably from the standpoint of fleecing their marks, and almost certainly from the standpoint of power over their customers.

    In the second place, putting all your eggs in one basket is one thing, but putting them all in somebody else's basket is quite another. Do they really want to hand over data collection to a company that can just turn off the tap at will? Is it a good idea to have a monoculture of privacy-invading tech that potentially provides a single point of failure vulnerable to browser extensions, specialized third-party services, and plain old hackers?

    --
    'The Economy' is a giant Ponzi scheme whose most pitiable suckers are the youngest among us and the yet-unborn.
  4. The problem... by thePsychologist · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The problem with anonymized data is that it's not really anonymous.

    All you need are multiple datasets to figure out who is who. For example, Google buys another dataset from Adobe. Even though no names are in it, they can use patterns in it checked against their own non-anonymous data to figure out who you are.

    Anonymized data is just a nice term used to fool the masses.

    --
    "What lies behind us, and what lies before us are tiny matters compared to what lies within us." Ralph Waldo Emerson