Toronto Star

Net neutrality fight really about knowing what you see online, to better hit you with ads

- ROGER KAMENA, DANIEL LEMIRE AND NICOLAS SCOTT THE CONVERSATI­ON

In the social and political saga surroundin­g the question of net neutrality, what often is overlooked is the data war going on behind the scenes. The real fuel behind the debate is the enormous volume of data we generate with each search and click.

As a marketable commodity, large-scale audience data has completely trans- formed the global economic landscape in less than a decade.

The emergence of GAFA (Google, Amazon, Facebook and Apple) germinated a disruptive new business model that capitalize­s on what many consider to be the new oil: Data.

Based on a study published by eMarketer in September 2017, we can see how user-data companies (UDC) now hold the top five positions among the largest brands in the world.

In 2006, five of the top 10 brands were retailers. By 2017, nine of the top 10 brands in the world were UDCs.

The nature of the data business model can be understood by the relationsh­ip between its three core pillars: The internet user, who generates the data; the content publisher, who offers the internet user a service (often free) in exchange for personal data; and the advertiser, who buys data from content publishers in order to run more effective marketing campaigns.

Clearly, the winners in the 2017 U.S. repeal of net neutrality rules are the large telecommun­ications companies, who happen to be the glue, as internet providers, between the internet user and the publisher (Google, Facebook). They stand to gain an enormous strategic advantage with the end of net neutrality.

By having more control over an individual’s internet usage, those companies are in a position to adjust prices in ways that could benefit their bottom line. For example, AT&T could decide that from now on, given the large bandwidth used by Netflix, the latter would have to pay a usage fee to maintain its regular website streaming speed.

Conversely, the internet service provider (ISP) could just as well charge internet users an extra fee to maintain their Netflix streaming at a regular or faster speed. In an extreme case of greed, the ISP could overcharge both Netflix and its user. But there is more to it than that. In 2015, Fortune purported what it deemed to be the “real reason Verizon bought AOL.” In that article, journalist Kevin Fitchard observed: “Verizon isn’t trying to create an internet powerhouse with this investment. It’s likely just trying to gain some type of foothold in the changing online industry, as its traditiona­l communicat­ions business slows down.”

Fitchard is alluding to the dominance of the data business model that gave rise to GAFA. As such, we can see why telecom companies such as Verizon, that control the internet channels through which the data is transmitte­d, would also want to control — and take advantage of — the data itself. As Fitchard further observes in the same article:

“While AOL may be most known for its dial-up services and growing content empire — which includes the Huffington Post, Engadget and TechCrunch — it also has put together a sophistica­ted suite of advertisin­g technologi­es for online and traditiona­l media that no other company (aside from Google and Facebook) can match.”

The advertisin­g technology in question, commonly referred to as programmat­ic advertisin­g, uses advanced machine learning and artificial intelligen­ce (AI) on the data generated by online user behaviour, and tracked by browser cookies or device IDs stored in mobile applicatio­ns. Much of the advertisin­g performanc­e offered by Google, Facebook, AOL and others is largely attributed to their investment­s in this kind of technology, which Verizon can now leverage.

As described in an email by John Cosley, director of marketing for Microsoft search advertisin­g, digital ads are “perhaps by far the most lucrative applicatio­n of AI (and) machine learning in the industry.”

To maximize the power of these advertisin­g algorithms, companies need to secure big data. Since internet users are the prime generators of this precious raw material, publishers need to continuall­y increase the number of visitors coming to their websites or mobile applicatio­ns.

In a move to secure that expansion, shortly after its acquisitio­n of AOL, Verizon bought Yahoo, Google’s competitor in the search engine market. Yahoo! also has access to the entire Microsoft advertisin­g network and its user data.

In order to assess the impact of this streak of acquisitio­ns on total user reach of Verizon vs. Google and Facebook, we used comScore data from May 2017, made available courtesy of Adviso Conseil. The comScore platform is essentiall­y an audience analytics software used to track the data coming from most of the large desktop and mobile publishers in the world.

The data shows the distributi­on of unique visitors across all the top platforms in the United States. It clearly shows Yahoo and Microsoft competing closely with Google and Facebook in terms of user reach.

The competitiv­e advantage of this merger — now a super-entity called Oath by Verizon — stands out immediatel­y when one looks at the combined reach of AOL, HuffPost and Yahoo.

The best way to illustrate the direct relationsh­ip between data and net neutrality is to simply ask the following question:

If a telecommun­ication company like Verizon were in a position to compete with Google and Facebook for data dollars, what happens if it also controls the data pipeline used by its competitor­s?

The answer is obvious. If U.S. telecoms can control internet access capricious­ly, while also controllin­g platforms that compete with GAFA, what stops them from impeding the pipeline of their competitor­s? Absolutely nothing. Back in 2014, German Chancellor Angela Merkel spoke out against net neutrality. We expect the recent decision in the U.S. to further affect the polarity of opinions on net neutrality.

We should also note that Google, in an obvious pre-emptive response to the end of net neutrality, launched its own ISP infrastruc­ture in 2010 called Google Fiber.

In the end, with the reigning status of the global top 10 brands on the line, the data war is undoubtedl­y what drives the debate over net neutrality. Roger Kamena is principal consultant of digital media and data science, at L’Universite TELUQ; Daniel Lemire is a professor at L’Universite TELUQ, and Nicolas Scott at the Universite de Montreal. This article originally was published on The Conversati­on, an independen­t and non-profit source of news, analysis and commentary from academic experts.

The data war is undoubtedl­y what drives the debate over net neutrality

 ?? CHIP SOMODEVILL­A/GETTY IMAGES ?? Rally organizers carry away props following a protest last December outside the U.S. Federal Communicat­ions Commission building.
CHIP SOMODEVILL­A/GETTY IMAGES Rally organizers carry away props following a protest last December outside the U.S. Federal Communicat­ions Commission building.
 ?? ALEX EDELMAN/AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? A protester holds a “Save the Net” sign during a demonstrat­ion last December against the proposed repeal of net neutrality in Washington, D.C.
ALEX EDELMAN/AFP/GETTY IMAGES A protester holds a “Save the Net” sign during a demonstrat­ion last December against the proposed repeal of net neutrality in Washington, D.C.

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