> It's reminiscent of secret police behaviour with their networks of informants
That's a bit of a stretch.
Also I don't believe the vast majority of people care about an organisation generating a profile of your interests, otherwise services like GMail and Facebook would have failed.
Right, I agree that this 'secret police' comparison is off.
But your Facebook/GMail comparison is different as well: They are not useful/popular because of user tracking, they provide us with a free and (limited..?) useful service. I'd argue that's a bad thing as well, but I'd separate multiple levels of evil tracking:
1) You track me to sell my data and to profit from the ads. I gain nothing (you might be very lucky to guess that I want X and therefor save me from having to type "Where to buy X" into Google, but I'd not consider that useful in general).
2) You provide a free service that I'd gladly use. You track information about me to make a living, pay the costs etc.
1) is unacceptable for me, although it tends to be largely ignored in general and considered normal.
2) is on the edge and I'd like you to at least tell me about your tracking and make me aware of the general data you're collecting. It's up to me to opt-in (by using the service and agreeing to this tracking) or going elsewhere.
> You track me to sell my data and to profit from the ads. I gain nothing
Sure you do; you get to use Gmail and Facebook for free because they generate enough money from ads not to have to charge.
I can understand that there people like yourself that don't want to be tracked, that's cool, but if the majority of people don't care, should the system at least be opt-out? Or left up to the user to use the do-not-track features of browsers?
I'm not saying tracking must be forced on everyone, but this piece of legislation seems like a massive hammer to hit a very tiny nail.
You didn't understand my post. Might be completely my fault though, so let me add one last remark:
I presented two tracking reasons/models. You quote my model 1), which is about user tracking for your own sake only, without giving something in return. In other words: There's no direct connection between you selling out what you collect about me and my usage.
You talk about GMail/Facebook, which I presented as another, different example/model, 2). The quote does not apply here.
For these services I trade privacy for usage and I merely wish that the trade would be more transparent so that everyone and his mom can decide if they want to give up these details for your service or not. But - it's at least a "deal" of some sort: You give me something valuable/useful, I have to cope with your privacy invasion.
Ah sorry I see your distinction, I misread model 2), thought you were referring to gmail/facebook in model 1).
Yeah if a company is tracking me which results in me gaining nothing and them gaining income, that is quite annoying, I'm not disagreeing that in that case it's wrong. But I still don't think you are harmed in a way that requires such a sweeping piece of legislation. These sorts of rules may land up harming the free services you refer to in model 2).
If there was a way to target just the companies in model 1) without interferring too much in the user experience of all web-users, I'd be for it.
That's a bit of a stretch.
Also I don't believe the vast majority of people care about an organisation generating a profile of your interests, otherwise services like GMail and Facebook would have failed.