Difference between revisions of "Attribute"

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Attribute (also called property or data element) is a piece of information associated with a user ID (e.g., gender=male, interest=sports, purchase=car) often with timestamps that can enable recency-based trigger targeting or sequential messaging. Declared Attribute are generated directly by consumers, while system-generated attributes are generated by software that often processes multiple events to generate a single attribute.
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== Overview ==
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Attribute (also called property or data element) is a piece of information associated with a user ID (e.g., gender=male, interest=sports, purchase=car) often with timestamps that can enable recency-based trigger targeting or sequential messaging.  
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Attributes can be distinguished by four key dimensions:
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# Data source that is an input to generate the attribute
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# Organization collecting the attribute input data 
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# Process generating an attribute
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# Type of outputted attribute that is generated<ref>https://www.iab.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/01/IAB-Data-Lexicon-Update-2016.pdf</ref>
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[[File:Attribute Dimensions.PNG|center|frame|''Source: IAB Data Lexicon (2016)'']]
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== Input data source ==
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The input data may be collected from online or offline sources. Given the rise of mobile and connected devices, more offline activity is also now collected via digital devices thus attributes are more often distinguished by what the information used as an input to generate them.
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The source of input data used to generate attributes can refer either to user activity (e.g., view, interaction, registration, purchase) or information about the user (e.g., gender=male).
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== Organization collecting the input data ==
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Some organizations that collect, process and store input data have a direct relationship with the user. Data collected by these organizations is called "[[First_Party_Data|First Party Data]]." Some organizations describe the process of ”a first party that sells or shares data to a non-affiliated website or service," as "Second-party Data."<ref>https://www.iab.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/01/IAB-Data-Lexicon-Update-2016.pdf</ref> The recipient of this data is a "third party." Thus the rules around data ownership, use and control are governed only in relation to first and third-party definitions.
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Oftentimes an attribute is generated from user activity across multiple organizations. For example, counting how many ad impressions were delivered in an Open Web campaign may involved user activity across thousands of publishers websites. Accordingly, modern privacy regulations focus which organizations control and are accountable for the appropriate processing of this collected data. For this reason, some privacy regulators state given the absence of distinctions "between first-party and third-party data in  data protection law," using such criteria runs the "risk of interpreting data protection law in an anti-competitive manner."<ref>https://ico.org.uk/media/about-the-ico/documents/2619797/cma-ico-public-statement-20210518.pdf</ref>
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<blockquote>"For example, such risks could arise from an interpretation o f data protection law  in which transfers of personal data between different businesses owned by a single corporate entity – such as a large platform company – are  in principle viewed as acceptable from a privacy perspective, while transfers of personal data between independently-owned businesses are not, even if these businesses are functionally equivalent to those of the platform and the data is processed on the same basis and according to the same standards."<ref>https://ico.org.uk/media/about-the-ico/documents/2619797/cma-ico-public-statement-20210518.pdf</ref></blockquote>
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Thus third-parties that create [[Third_Party_Data|data]] products that span collection from websites and stores not owned or controlled by a single organization can offer smaller websites and stores that do not have the technical, data or service resources the ability to compete against large vertically-integrated companies.
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== Attribute Generation Process ==
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The input data that is processed into an outputted attribute can be actively declared by a user or algorithmically generated. The process of generating an attribute can be defined whether the user actively supplies the information (i.e. "declared" or "[[Deterministic|deterministic]]" data) or whether it is generated from a system (i.e. "inferred" or "[[Probabilistic|probabilistic]]" data). Thus, declared attributes are generated directly by consumers, while system-generated attributes are generated by software that often processes multiple events to generate a single attribute.
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"Declared data is often assumed to be of higher quality, but some users are not truthful in filling out forms (e.g., lying about their income on a dating site)."<ref>https://www.iab.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/01/IAB-Data-Lexicon-Update-2016.pdf</ref>
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An attribute's quality is thus better measured by how consistently the information correlates to people responding to the content, than a delineation in the input data source or process used to generate the attribute.
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== Type of Outputted Attribute ==
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The attribute generated from the input data describes characteristics of a user or their activity. When the attribute describes prior information it is "descriptive." When the attribute to describes likely future actions it is "predictive."
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<blockquote>"Most often descriptive segments are based on information about the user (e.g., age, income, location, marital status, presence of children).  Information about the user’s interests is often predictive, since this infers the likelihood of the user’s interest continuing into the future, rather than merely describing the user’s past interest."<ref>https://www.iab.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/01/IAB-Data-Lexicon-Update-2016.pdf</ref></blockquote>
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== References ==
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<references />
  
 
[[Category:Glossary|Attribute]]
 
[[Category:Glossary|Attribute]]

Revision as of 17:43, 20 June 2021

Overview

Attribute (also called property or data element) is a piece of information associated with a user ID (e.g., gender=male, interest=sports, purchase=car) often with timestamps that can enable recency-based trigger targeting or sequential messaging.

Attributes can be distinguished by four key dimensions:

  1. Data source that is an input to generate the attribute
  2. Organization collecting the attribute input data
  3. Process generating an attribute
  4. Type of outputted attribute that is generated[1]
Source: IAB Data Lexicon (2016)

Input data source

The input data may be collected from online or offline sources. Given the rise of mobile and connected devices, more offline activity is also now collected via digital devices thus attributes are more often distinguished by what the information used as an input to generate them.

The source of input data used to generate attributes can refer either to user activity (e.g., view, interaction, registration, purchase) or information about the user (e.g., gender=male).

Organization collecting the input data

Some organizations that collect, process and store input data have a direct relationship with the user. Data collected by these organizations is called "First Party Data." Some organizations describe the process of ”a first party that sells or shares data to a non-affiliated website or service," as "Second-party Data."[2] The recipient of this data is a "third party." Thus the rules around data ownership, use and control are governed only in relation to first and third-party definitions.

Oftentimes an attribute is generated from user activity across multiple organizations. For example, counting how many ad impressions were delivered in an Open Web campaign may involved user activity across thousands of publishers websites. Accordingly, modern privacy regulations focus which organizations control and are accountable for the appropriate processing of this collected data. For this reason, some privacy regulators state given the absence of distinctions "between first-party and third-party data in data protection law," using such criteria runs the "risk of interpreting data protection law in an anti-competitive manner."[3]

"For example, such risks could arise from an interpretation o f data protection law in which transfers of personal data between different businesses owned by a single corporate entity – such as a large platform company – are in principle viewed as acceptable from a privacy perspective, while transfers of personal data between independently-owned businesses are not, even if these businesses are functionally equivalent to those of the platform and the data is processed on the same basis and according to the same standards."[4]

Thus third-parties that create data products that span collection from websites and stores not owned or controlled by a single organization can offer smaller websites and stores that do not have the technical, data or service resources the ability to compete against large vertically-integrated companies.

Attribute Generation Process

The input data that is processed into an outputted attribute can be actively declared by a user or algorithmically generated. The process of generating an attribute can be defined whether the user actively supplies the information (i.e. "declared" or "deterministic" data) or whether it is generated from a system (i.e. "inferred" or "probabilistic" data). Thus, declared attributes are generated directly by consumers, while system-generated attributes are generated by software that often processes multiple events to generate a single attribute.

"Declared data is often assumed to be of higher quality, but some users are not truthful in filling out forms (e.g., lying about their income on a dating site)."[5]

An attribute's quality is thus better measured by how consistently the information correlates to people responding to the content, than a delineation in the input data source or process used to generate the attribute.

Type of Outputted Attribute

The attribute generated from the input data describes characteristics of a user or their activity. When the attribute describes prior information it is "descriptive." When the attribute to describes likely future actions it is "predictive."

"Most often descriptive segments are based on information about the user (e.g., age, income, location, marital status, presence of children). Information about the user’s interests is often predictive, since this infers the likelihood of the user’s interest continuing into the future, rather than merely describing the user’s past interest."[6]

References