Profit Over Privacy: How Surveillance Advertising Conquered The Internet

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The contemporary internet’s de facto business model is one of surveillance. Browser cookies follow us around the web, Amazon targets us with eerily prescient ads, Facebook and Google read our messages and analyze our patterns, and apps record our every move. In Profit over Privacy, Matthew Crain gives internet surveillance a much-needed origin story by chronicling the development of its most important historical catalyst: web advertising. The first institutional and political history of internet advertising, Profit over Privacy uses the 1990s as its backdrop to show how the massive data-collection infrastructure that undergirds the internet today is the result of twenty-five years of technical and political economic engineering. Crain considers the social causes and consequences of the internet’s rapid embrace of consumer monitoring, detailing how advertisers and marketers adapted to the existential threat of the internet and marshaled venture capital to develop the now-ubiquitous business model called “surveillance advertising.” He draws on a range of primary resources from government, industry, and the press and highlights the political roots of internet advertising to underscore the necessity of political solutions to reign in unaccountable commercial surveillance. The dominant business model on the internet, surveillance advertising is the result of political choices—not the inevitable march of technology. Unlike many other countries, the United States has no internet privacy law. A fascinating prehistory of internet advertising giants like Google and Facebook, Profit over Privacy argues that the internet did not have to turn out this way and that it can be remade into something better.

Author(s): Matthew Crain
Edition: 1
Publisher: University Of Minnesota Press
Year: 2021

Language: English
Commentary: TruePDF
Pages: 217
Tags: Internet Advertising; Internet: Economic Aspects; Electronic Surveillance: Social Aspects

Cover Page
Title Page
Copyright Page
Contents
Introduction
Chapter 1 | The Revolution Will Be Commercialized
Chapter 2 | A Framework for Global Electronic Commerce
Chapter 3 | The Web Gets a Memory
Chapter 4 | The Dot-com Bubble
Chapter 5 | Surveillance Advertising Takes Shape
Chapter 6 | The Privacy Challenge
Chapter 7 | The Legacy of the Dot-com Era
Acknowledgments
Notes
Index
About the Author