"Psssst! Hey buddy, check dis out over heeya. If ya give me yer database of customas'
offline info, I'll give you email addresses to match! Waddaya say pal? $2 per name,
awright?" That's how it might go down in a dark alley in privacy advocates' nightmare,
but the reality is that the email appending industry uses bright chirpy banter and
photos of clean-cut staffers to tell you the story. The following link will take
you to the site of a vendor who explains email appending with Sunday-school innocence.
http://www.accudata.com/s_selfpromotion/email_append.html
Email appending is big business. Here's how it works. A multinational corporation
wants to send out an email campaign to it's database of offline customers, say those
who purchased their computer printer and filled out the warranty card and mailed
it in. The problem? They don't have the email addresses of those customers. Who
ya gonna call? Here, let's visit my favorite search engine, Google, and type "email
appending" into the search box. Click submit.
There are results 1 - 10 of about 42,300. Search took 0.05 seconds. So much for
exhaustive research. Well I suppose that if you wanted to drag things out a bit
you could do a few price comparisons. The industry is huge and profitable.
So you want email addresses? Zip us an Excel spreadsheet of your customers names,
addresses and phone numbers and we'll send back email addresses to match those customers
with. What we won't tell you is that we are missing a good deal of that information
ourselves and you'll be paying us to incorporate YOUR information into our email
database. If you pay us enough, we'll even tell you about those customers lives,
their taste in cars, their travel habits and their income levels. And . . . that's
not all, if you can provide us with information on their computer system and software
purchases, we'll throw in a free recap of their credit history -- No Charge!
DoubleClick was publicly reamed for announcing they would do this by merging
the database of a direct marketing company they acquired with their own database
of email addresses and the surfing habits of online users. They were sued, they
lost millions, they were vilified in the press. Hmmmm. Why don't we care that 42,300
others are doing the same thing?
The Direct Marketing Association (DMA) has introduced guidelines on the practice.
A marketing industry analyst comments in the email marketing publication, "Opt-in
News" editorialized on the self-serving nature of the DMA's dance around the term
"Opt-In" when they say:
E-mail address appending is the process of adding an individual's e-mail address
to that individual's record inside a marketer's existing database. This is accomplished
by matching the marketer's database against a third party, permission-based database
to produce a corresponding e-mail address. I was amazed that the organization (Direct
Marketing Association) danced around privacy issues by creating a loophole extravaganza.
The document was written by marketers for marketers, culminating in a classic case
of a wolf in sheep's clothing.
If even email marketing industry publications have strong words for the practice
of email appending, what should the public think of the meticulous gathering of
personal information by marketers into vast databases of assembled information that
the public knows nothing about, gave no permission or consent to assemble that information,
and would likely disapprove if they did know the practice was going on behind their
back.
May 20, 2002, a financial privacy bill was defeated a second time in California
after banking and insurance industry lobbyists contributed $5 Million toward politicians
who opposed (or refused to vote on) a bill denying them the right to trade and sell
Californians private financial information. Governor Gray Davis received nearly
$1 Million ($880,000) of that amount after agreeing to veto any financial privacy
bill that crossed his desk.
Californians have some very strong privacy advocates in the California Senate,
like Senator Jackie Speier, who introduced various versions of her financial privacy
bill repeatedly, only to have banking and insurance industry lobbyists jump in to
change the outcome.
Online business is contributing dramatically to the erosion of privacy by assembling
personal, private, sensitive information about each and every customer simply by
seeking the email addresses of their customers when they didn't receive it from
the customer personally, but through email appending services. Those services may
have only had a name and email address to match before the online business unkowingly
contributed all the data they held about their customers to the email appending
firm doing the research.
The automotive department at Sears offers up name address, phone number, car
model, make and repair history to an email appending firm when they request customers
email addresses from those appending firms. They get the email address, but have
just contributed to further privacy erosion in order to send an email about their
lube, oil and filter change special.
The appending firm deals with a bank, a computer superstore and a discount warehouse
and now has information that was inaccessible to them before. I could be argued
that the businesses should be paid for the information they have given up to gain
the email address. But they don't realize what they are doing in most cases. Even
if they do understand the privacy invasion involved here, they are unlikely to care.
They just want the email address to spam, er, market to their customers!
I wonder how much they'd charge to remove my information from all those databases?
I don't think I could afford to buy back my privacy once you add up all the money
spent to violate it.