CRFeb 2, 2022

Opted Out, Yet Tracked: Are Regulations Enough to Protect Your Privacy?

arXiv:2202.00885v327 citations
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This addresses privacy risks for users under existing regulations, highlighting enforcement gaps in a domain-specific context.

The paper tackles the problem of verifying compliance with data protection regulations like GDPR and CCPA when users opt out of data collection, proposing an auditing framework that uses advertisers' bidding behavior to measure violations. Results show that user data is often still collected and shared after opt-out, with some Consent Management Platforms performing better than others and advertiser-offered controls being ineffective.

Data protection regulations, such as GDPR and CCPA, require websites and embedded third-parties, especially advertisers, to seek user consent before they can collect and process user data. Only when the users opt in, can these entities collect, process, and share user data. Websites typically incorporate Consent Management Platforms (CMPs), such as OneTrust and CookieBot, to solicit and convey user consent to the embedded advertisers, with the expectation that the consent will be respected. However, neither the websites nor the regulators currently have any mechanism to audit advertisers' compliance with the user consent, i.e., to determine if advertisers indeed do not collect, process, and share user data when the user opts out. In this paper, we propose an auditing framework that leverages advertisers' bidding behavior to empirically assess the violations of data protection regulations. Using our framework, we conduct a measurement study to evaluate four of the most widely deployed CMPs, i.e., Didomi, Quantcast, OneTrust, and CookieBot, as well as advertiser-offered opt-out controls, i.e., National Advertising Initiative's opt-out, under GDPR and CCPA. Our results indicate that in many cases user data is unfortunately still being collected, processed, and shared even when users opt-out. We also find that some CMPs are better than the others at conveying user consent and that several ad platforms ignore user consent. Our results also indicate that advertiser-offered opt-out are equally ineffective at protecting user privacy.

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