My letter to The Consumerist

10:50 pm Legal, Opt-out, Technical

A letter I wrote to The Consumerist a few days ago was just published as an update to their previous coverage of Charter’s illegal wiretapping program. It’s good that they’re covering this, because Charter doesn’t seem to understand that their customers are pretty much universally pissed. Here’s my letter (areas highlighted by The Consumerist have been left as such):

Dear Consumerist,

I spent a long time last night looking into the way Charter is handling this program, and based on their own explanation it’s obvious that the cookie is not a “real” opt-out. Here’s why.

When a customer clicks a link, advertisement, or visits a page, Charter will capture the browsing data and send it to the third-party advertising provider. If Charter wanted to offer a functional opt-out, it would be at this deep-packet inspection level. The do not offer a way out of that service, however. The only thing they offer is the cookie-based solution you’ve previously covered, which merely tells the third-party organization not to match the machine with the DPI-harvested data or deliver the advertising. Customer browsing is still being captured and is still being turned over regardless of anyone’s individual opt-out status, but the third party is just blocked from doing anything with it by the cookie.

I might also point out that by doing this Charter is explicitly requesting that their customers choose not to follow safe browsing best practices. Every modern browser available today has an option for clearing cookies when the browser is closed, and many people choose to take advantage of this practice, myself included. Charter is either demanding that I and many others either fill out their form several dozen times per day (every time we open our browser) or specifically switch off browsing features intended to keep customers safe. Neither of these are acceptable, of course.

I am going to contact Charter’s executive team again this morning on the matter, as well as an attorney. I have not been notified of Charter’s changes through a letter or email, and learned about this program last night via other means. Having read through the Cable Privacy Act, which governs Charter’s use of personally identifiable information, I have discovered no fewer than three potential violations. Moreover, Charter is required by law to make any collected data available to its customers, so I would suggest that all Charter customers request their DPI browsing data on a daily basis, and file appropriate complaints when they fail to deliver it as required by law.

They’re not going to stop doing this until or unless they lose more money than they make on it. We have vehicles available to us to lose them vast sums of money on this project, if only the word gets out.

I did contact an attorney here in town, but he flat-out refused to consider the case. Maybe his being on the Chamber of Commerce, who bears partial responsibility for saddling myself and my neighbors with the scourge that is Charter Communications by granting them a monopoly, had something to do with his decision. Congress has since gotten involved, so I’m going to wait before I call another one. We might yet still get out of this without individual legal action being necessary.

One Response

  1. Vance Decker Says:

    Big Deal, I don’t know who is worse, Charter, or the Consumerist.com with their worst company of the year fraud sham contest.

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