Yahoo Reverses Position On ‘Do Not Track’

Yahoo will no longer honour browsers’ “Do Not Track” requests, the company has announced.

“As of today, web browser Do Not Track settings will no longer be enabled on Yahoo,” the company said in a statement.

‘No effective standard’

The decision was attributed to the lack of a coherent standard, Yahoo said. “We have yet to see a single standard emerge that is effective, easy to use and has been adopted by the broader tech industry,” the company stated. “Users can still manage their privacy on Yahoo while benefiting from a personalised web experience.”

Yahoo was the first and largest web company to say it would comply with the Do Not Track setting, which has been integrated into mainstream browsers and which Microsoft even enables by default in version 10 of its Internet Explorer. Pinterest and Twitter are among the other companies that have said they will comply with such requests.

The standard has been contentious, particularly with the advertising industry, which has argued it does not accurately reflect users’ preferences, particularly in the case of IE 10, which enables the feature by default. Yahoo previously said it would not accept Do Not Track requests from IE10.

Last September the Digital Advertising Alliance an advertising industry group withdrew from the World Wide Web Consortium’s tracking protection working group, saying it was “dissatisfied” with the Do Not Track standard’s progress.

Personalisation

Yahoo operates one of the largest ad networks on the Web, and its Do Not Track decision affects this network, as well as sites such as Flickr and Tumblr.

The company has recently placed an emphasis on personalisation as it seeks to bolster its competitiveness against rivals such as Microsoft and Google. Yahoo says it collects data on users’ web searches and demographic and location information in order to personalise advertisements. Users can opt out of such tracking.

Mozilla said last June that 11 percent of the users of its Firefox browser had enabled Do Not Track, up from 1 percent two years earlier.

Are you a security pro? Try our quiz!

Matthew Broersma

Matt Broersma is a long standing tech freelance, who has worked for Ziff-Davis, ZDnet and other leading publications

Recent Posts

US Lawmakers Blast UK’s Demand For Encrypted Apple Data

Two US lawmakers urge US national intelligence director to demand UK to back down or…

14 mins ago

UK Government Partners Anthropic AI To Improve Public Services

Anthropic confirms Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) signed with UK government to explore use of AI…

3 days ago

ARM Shares Rise Amid Report Meta Will Purchase Its First Chip

British chip designer ARM Holdings is reportedly developing its own chip, and Meta is one…

3 days ago

TikTok Returns To Apple, Google Stores In US

TikTok returns to app stores of both Apple and Google in the United States, after…

3 days ago

Meta To Show Marketplace Ads From Rival Ad Providers

After huge fine, Meta launches 'Facebook Marketplace Partner Program' so rival service providers can list…

4 days ago

Improved Indoor Connectivity Could Add Billions To UK Economy – Survey

New research from Freshwave finds a better mobile signal indoors could grow the UK economy…

4 days ago