Kelsey Marques, 17, knew it couldn’t be just a coincidence when ads for a Chevy Malibu showed up on websites she viewed only a day after she had searched online for that exact car.
“It was a little creepy,” says Kelsey, a high school senior from Clark, New Jersey.
The reality is that whenever you’re on the web, you’re being watched. Companies gather details like where you live, the videos you watch, the games you play—and maybe even how you’re feeling. They sell that information to marketers, who use it to show you digital ads that match your interests, increasing the chance you’ll buy their products.
This practice—known as ad targeting—has major implications for your privacy. Critics charge that such data digging is typically done without users’ direct consent. They also say that it’s hard, if not impossible, to stop the tracking.
“Commercial surveillance has been baked into the foundation of the internet,” says Jeff Chester of the Center for Digital Democracy, a privacy group. “When you sign on to Facebook, you’re signing your digital life away.”
Kelsey Marques, 17, knew it couldn’t be just a coincidence when ads for a Chevy Malibu showed up on websites she was viewing. Just a day before, she had searched online for that exact car.
“It was a little creepy,” says Kelsey. She is a high school senior from Clark, New Jersey.
The reality is that whenever you’re on the web, you’re being watched. Companies gather details like where you live, the videos you watch, and the games you play. They might even be able to tell how you’re feeling. They sell that information to marketers. Marketers then use it to show you digital ads that match your interests. This increases the chance you’ll buy their products.
This practice is known as ad targeting. It has major consequences for your privacy. Critics say that such data digging is typically done without users’ direct consent. They also say that it’s hard, if not impossible, to stop the tracking.
“Commercial surveillance has been baked into the foundation of the internet,” says Jeff Chester. He is with a privacy group called the Center for Digital Democracy. “When you sign on to Facebook, you’re signing your digital life away.”