Pubdate: Wed, 12 Jul 2000 Source: Colorado Daily (CO) Copyright: 2000 Colorado Daily Contact: P.O. Box 1719, Boulder, CO 80306 Fax: (303) 443-9357 Website: http://www.codaily.com/ ONLINE PRIVACY IN SORE NEED OF LEGISLATION ANN ARBOR, Mich. -- The White Houseís Office of National Drug Control Policy (ONDCP) came under fire recently for tracking users on federally funded anti-drug Web sites. Armed with a $12-million advertising budget, the ONDCP bought ad space on major search engines and directed drug-related searches to federal sites that collected personal data from users with Internet cookies via DoubleClick, an online advertising and marketing giant. Cookies are the small text files stored on personal computers which track Internet traffic via banner ads or Web sites. This practice has enraged many online privacy experts and was rightfully discontinued by the ONDCP after the story broke. While the ONDCP says it was were only collecting raw statistical data and that no users were tracked by the planted cookies, any amount of personal information collected by the government without full consent - - much less user knowledge - is a violation of federal policy and a breach of privacy. Federal policy states that the White House and agency Web sites must have clearly posted privacy policies. Although the ONDCP has since abandoned cookie use, online privacy remains a hotly contested issue with implications beyond allegations of governmental misconduct. The personal data collected by private powers remains a formidable threat to privacy. The ONDCP has maintained close ties to private interests before. Earlier this year, drug czar Barry McCaffrey, the top official at the ONDCP, came under fire for his clandestine program of selling back advertising space to television networks who agreed to integrate anti-drug messages into prime-time programming. These covert propaganda programs lend little credibility to ONDCP or its message. On the cookie matter, the fact that top leaders of the ONDCP had no idea personal data was being profiled on their sites until the press broke the story warrants concern. The ONDCP is given unnecessary free reign and uses too many tax dollars in its prohibitory drug messages. Whether allegations of misuse of personal data in both private or governmental instances are substantiated, new legislative attention is required to protect consumers from watchful eyes of both governmental and private power on the Internet. Earlier this year, Michigan Attorney General Jennifer Granholm accused DoubleClick of violating Michiganís Consumer Protection Act. Granholm said in a statement, "Forget Big Brother. Truly, Big Browser appears to have arrived in the form of an Internet corporate giant. Companies like DoubleClick take advantage of the technology to rob people of their privacy." DoubleClick has also recently begun combining its more than 90 million personal Internet user profiles with hard data, such as names and addresses. Its practices differ little from other online companies like Yahoo!, AOL or Microsoft in their zeal to collect as much user data as possible. Through private efforts, the Internet has become a maze of interconnected data collecting mechanisms showing all the signs of significant intensification. The privacy of online users is at stake, especially with the wave of fizzled e-commerce burnouts selling data to larger corporations. Data that was once used by independent companies is now being amassed by Internet conglomerates at a frenzied pace. New privacy legislation must be enacted before consumers are put at further risk. New measures must also be taken to reign in the Office of National Drug Control Policy. - ---