The Mercury News

Twitter to use cookies to target ads

Company ramping up ad capabiliti­es ahead of 2014 IPO

- By Gerry Shih Reuters

SAN FRANCISCO — Twitter said Wednesday it would begin showing individual­ly targeted ads using cookies, an effective online tracking technology that also has fueled concerns about Internet privacy.

Twitter is only the latest Web company to use cookies, which have been deployed for years by firms like Google, Facebook, Amazon and practicall­y every other major website.

These small files, placed on Web surfers’ computers, contain bits of informatio­n about the user, such as other sites they have visited or where they are logging in from.

In the case of Twitter, the San Francisco company will allow retailers to attach anonymous versions of their customers’ email addresses, known as hashes, to Twitter’s advertisin­g engine to individual­ly target their customer base.

Privately owned Twitter, valued at close to $ 10 billion by investors, has ramped up its advertisin­g capabiliti­es ahead of a widely expected initial public offering in 2014.

Twitter’s new feature, which is expected to raise advertisin­g rates and revenues for the company, arrives in the midst of heightened public debate over the erosion of online privacy.

In recent years the European Union and the U. S. Federal Trade Commission have probed the extent of tracking technologi­es used by sites like Facebook. Last year, European authoritie­s began requiring websites to inform visitors that cookies were being placed on their computers.

Twitter noted in a blog post Wednesday that its use of cookies was “how most other companies handle this practice, and we don’t give advertiser­s any additional user informatio­n.”

Twitter also said it would give its users the option of disabling cookies by enabling a “Do Not Track” option in their browser. Many leading browsers such as Mozilla Firefox and Internet Explorer contain such options. Twitter users also can opt out of ads tailored by outside data by opening their account settings, the company said.

The efforts by authoritie­s, particular­ly in Europe, to clamp down on tracking technologi­es have spurred a furious backlash from the media and technology industries, which argue that cookies are critical to practicall­y the whole $ 100 billion Internet advertisin­g market.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States