Gnatcatcher

From Bitnami MediaWiki
Revision as of 16:07, 31 January 2021 by Jkoran (talk | contribs) (Created page with "Google's Gnatcatcher is designed to prevent marketers from using IP address to detect fraud or for geographic targeting. <ref>https://github.com/bslassey/ip-blindness</ref>...")
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Google's Gnatcatcher is designed to prevent marketers from using IP address to detect fraud or for geographic targeting. [1]

Gnatcatcher is an umbrella term for two proposals that impact the use of IP addresses.

The first Gnatcatcher related proposal is Near-Path Network Address Translator (NAT), which routes traffic through Google proxy servers to hide the client IP from other third-party organizations.[2] Although Google calls these proxy servers " IP privatizing server (IPPS)," there is no guarantee that Google itself does not use data from this re-routed traffic for its own business purposes.

The second Gnatcatcher related proposal is Willful IP Blindness proposal, which requires organizations to self-certify that they are masking IP addresses when transferring information to their supply chain partners. [3]

Impact

Google recognizes that geolocation is often used to help provide more relevant experiences as well as complying with regional regulations. "IP-based geolocation is used by a wide swath of services to serve content that is relevant to users (readers of news in Boston probably don’t care much about restaurant openings in Baltimore) as well as conforming to local laws."[4] Gnatcatcher suggests that Google may allow Google-designated organizations to receive native traffic that avoids the Google proxy servers. Google has suggested it might provide people's geolocation via a Geolocation API.

By removing the technographics that are often used to detect non-human traffic via Gnatcatcher, marketers would not be able to rely on existing fraud detection and prevention services. Moreover, by not being able to detect which publishers' sites have relatively more non-human traffic more of marketers budgets will be spent on fraud.

Open Questions

  • Will Google guarantee to people that their proxy servers will not log any personal data?
  • Will Google guarantee that it will not use any data from this re-routed traffic for any business purpose?
  • Given many publishers rely on supply chain partners for personalizing their web properties, will Google allow publisher control over which organizations receive native traffic that avoids the Google proxy servers?
  • Will Google allow people to opt out of Google's geolocation tracking?

References