
Privacy Policy
What are cookies?
A cookie is a small text file containing a string of
alphanumeric characters. There are two types of cookies: a persistent
cookie and a session cookie. A persistent cookie gets entered by
your Web browser into the cookie folder on your computers
hard drive. A persistent cookie remains in that cookie folder, which
is maintained and governed by your Web browser, after you close
your browser program. A session cookie is temporary and disappears
after you close your browser. DoubleClicks ad-serving and
paid search listing (DART Search) products utilize the
same cookie: the DART cookie. The DART cookie is a persistent cookie
and consists of the name of the domain that set the cookie (ad.doubleclick.net),
the lifetime of the cookie, and a value. DoubleClicks
DART technology generates a unique series of characters for the
value portion of the cookie.
What is the DoubleClick cookie doing on my computer?
If you have a DoubleClick cookie in your Cookies folder, it is
most likely a DART cookie. The DoubleClick DART cookie helps marketers
learn how well their Internet advertising campaigns or paid search
listings perform. Many marketers and Internet websites use DoubleClicks
DART technology to deliver and serve their advertisements or manage
their paid search listings. DoubleClicks DART products set
or recognize a unique, persistent cookie when an ad is displayed
or a paid listing is selected. The information that the DART cookie
helps to give marketers includes the number of unique users their
advertisements were displayed to, how many users clicked on their
Internet ads or paid listings, and which ads or paid listings they
clicked on.
Why does your cookie keep coming back after I delete it?
When you visit any website or search engine on which DoubleClicks
DART technology is used, our servers will check to see if you already
have a DART cookie. If the servers do not receive a DART cookie,
the servers will try to set a cookie in response to your browsers
request to view that Web page. If you do not want a
DART cookie with a unique value, you can obtain a DoubleClick DART
opt out cookie. Alternatively, you can adjust your Internet
browsers settings for handling cookies. This is explained
in the next question.
How can I adjust my cookie settings to accept or decline cookies?
To eliminate cookies you may have currently accepted, and to deny
or limit cookies in the future, please follow one of these procedures:
IMPORTANT: IF YOU DELETE YOUR OPT-OUT COOKIE, YOU WILL NEED TO OPT-OUT
AGAIN. IF YOUR BROWSER BLOCKS ALL OR THIRD-PARTY COOKIES, YOU WILL
BLOCK THE SETTING OF OPT-OUT COOKIES.
* If you are using Internet Explorer 6.0, go to the Tools menu,
then to Internet Options, then to the Privacy tab. This version
of Internet Explorer is the first to use P3P to distinguish between
types of cookies. P3P uses standardized privacy statements made
by the cookie issuer to manage your acceptance of cookies. Under
the Privacy tab, click on the Advanced button.
Select Override automatic cookie handling and choose
whether you want to accept, block or be prompted for First-party
and Third-party Cookies. If you want to block all cookies
coming from DoubleClicks doubleclick.net domain, go to the
Web Sites section under the Privacy tab
and click the Edit button. In the Address of Web
site field, enter doubleclick.net, select Block,
click OK (menu will disappear); click OK again and you will be back
to the browser.
* If you are using Netscape 6.0+, go to Edit in the
menu bar, click on Preferences, click on Advanced,
and select the Cookies field. Now check either the box
that says, Warn me before accepting a cookie or Disable
cookies. Click on OK. Now go to your Start
button, click on Find, click on Files and Folders,
type cookies.txt into the search box that appears, and
click Find Now. When the search results appear, drag
all files listed, into the Recycle Bin. Now shut down
and restart your Netscape. Depending on your earlier choice you
will either be prompted by new cookie sets or no cookies will be
set or received.
* If you are using Mozilla or Safari, please go to their websites
to find out how to disable cookies in those programs.
What are Web beacons?
Web beacons are small strings of HTML code that are placed in a
Web page. They are sometimes called clear GIFs (Graphics
Interchange Format) or pixel tags. Web beacons are most
often used in conjunction with cookies. DoubleClick uses Web beacons
in connection with its products and services, including ad serving
and paid search listings (DART Search). Because a Web
beacon is only 1 pixel high by 1 pixel wide, it appears invisible
on your computer screen. If Web beacons were made larger (e.g.,
100 pixels high by 100 pixels wide), it would take much longer for
your Web page to load and would clutter up the page that you have
requested.
In 2002, working with a broad spectrum of companies, including
other technology companies, seal providers and websites, DoubleClick
helped draft Best Practice guidelines for disclosing
the use of Web beacons. Please click here to see these guidelines
and a list of the companies that participated in developing
them.
What is personally identifiable information (PII")?
Personally identifiable information is any information
that can identify or locate a particular person, including but not
limited to name, address, telephone number, email address, social
security number, bank account number or credit card number.
What is non personally identifiable information (non-PII)?
Non-personally identifiable information is information
that cannot identify a particular person. This type of information
includes a users Internet Service Provider, a computers
operating system and browser type, and a unique DoubleClick DART
cookie ID.
DoubleClicks ad-serving and search products utilize non-PII.
Some of our clients may associate PII that you have given them (for
example, a customer number, if you have registered at or purchased
from their websites), with their advertising campaigns. Although
this customer number may be passed from the client to DoubleClicks
ad servers during the ad delivery process, DoubleClick cannot recognize
this information as PII and cannot link it to any person.
What is sensitive information?
To DoubleClick, sensitive information categorically
includes but is not limited to data related to an individual's health
or medical condition, sexual behavior or orientation, or detailed
personal finances, information that appears to relate to children
under the age of 13 at the time of data collection; and PII otherwise
protected under federal or state law (for example, cable subscriber
information or video rental records). DoubleClick does not use any
sensitive information to target Internet advertisements.
What is ad serving?
In order to support their content without charging visitors, websites
sell advertising space on their Web pages. Companies like DoubleClick
provide technology for the websites and advertisers to use to display
ads on the websites. DoubleClicks ad servers work at the direction
and on behalf of our clients.
When you visit a website, your computers Internet browser
transmits a request to that websites server, asking
that server to send you the Web page that you are seeking. Most
Web pages contain components that are pulled from different sources.
For example, a Web page at a news site may get its weather section
from one provider, its sports results from a different source, and
advertisements from other servers.
If the website is using DoubleClicks technology to display
ads on its site, the Web page will contain coding that directs your
browser to fill the ad space on the Web page with content from one
of DoubleClicks ad servers. DoubleClicks clients select
the format, content, and location of the ads, as well as the criteria
for controlling which ads to show and when to show them. DoubleClicks
ad-serving technology uses a cookie to help clients determine what
ads to display. When a call is received by DoubleClicks
ad servers, the server checks to see if the calling
browser has sent a cookie with the request for advertising. If the
server doesnt see either a unique DoubleClick
cookie or an opt-out cookie, after testing to see whether
the browser will accept cookies, the server sets a unique DoubleClick
ad cookie. If the browser already has a unique DoubleClick ad cookie,
the server recognizes the cookie and uses the unique
ID for targeting and reporting purposes as specified by the DoubleClick
client. If the browser has an opt-out DoubleClick cookie, the server
uses only the non-cookie related information that is automatically
transmitted in the Internet environment (e.g., browser type, Internet
service provider, and information about the general content of the
site or page displayed on your browser) to determine which ad to
show. Sometimes Web beacons are used in conjunction with the DART
cookie when clients want more versatile targeting or reporting capabilities.
How does an ad-serving client use DoubleClicks technology
to target or select which ad to deliver?
Our clients store their ads on DoubleClicks ad servers. When
you visit a Web page on which a client is using DoubleClick technology
to deliver ads, coding that the website publisher placed in the
Web page tells your computers browser to send a request for
an ad to the DoubleClick ad server. When the DoubleClick ad server
receives a request, it will select an ad based on the criteria that
the client has chosen together with any information logged against
the unique cookie id.
For example, a clients website may attract an audience of
mainly men, aged between 18 and 45, who are interested in sports,
fashion and electronic gadgets. The client will therefore approach
sports, fashion and electronic gadget retailers to see if they would
like to advertise on the site. Those retailers will provide the
client with ads, which the client will store on the DoubleClick
ad servers. The client will assign those ads specific codes, such
as sports = 1, fashion = 2, and electronic gadgets = 3. On the pages
where the website publisher wants to show all three categories of
ads, the website will install an ad tag that contains all three
codes. On pages of the website that the client thinks attracts only
men interested in sports, an ad tag that contains only the code
for sports, code 1, may be installed.
DoubleClick does not tell clients which criteria to select or which
advertisements to target against those criteria. Clients choose
the categories they wish to attach to the advertising that they
have contracted to show, what code(s) they wish to attach to those
categories, and which code(s) they wish to include in each of their
ad request tags. In their contracts with DoubleClick, DoubleClicks
ad-serving clients promise not to use information that DoubleClick
could recognize as either sensitive or personally
identifiable to target ads.
What information is collected by a client using DoubleClicks
ad serving technology?
Each time one of DoubleClick's ad servers receives a request for
an ad or for a Web beacon, information about the request received
and the ad or Web beacon served for example, the date, the
time, the website to which the ad or image was delivered, the cookie
ID to which the ad was shown, the operating system which the browser
was using will be recorded.
Does DoubleClick itself do anything with this ad-serving information?
No. The information that is recorded on the DoubleClick servers
by our clients use of our technology belongs to our clients.
Although that information may be logged on a DoubleClick server,
DoubleClick's relationship with the client is that of an agent or
processor. Consequently, DoubleClick does not own that information
and cannot, therefore, use that information for its own business
purposes or in any way not authorized by the relevant client. DoubleClick
clients do, however, give us permission to use statistical or aggregate
information derived from their use of the technology e.g.,
statistics about the number of ads served through the technology
per month or analyses about, for example, what time of day is the
best time to target certain types of ads.
Does DoubleClick sell the ad serving information to other companies?
No. The data that DoubleClicks servers record during ad serving
belong to DoubleClicks clients, and DoubleClick cannot and
does not sell that information to other companies. DoubleClick can,
however, use its aggregate analyses about the effectiveness of ad
campaigns to help clients develop more efficient and successful
campaigns.
What are pop-ups and why do I see pop up advertising?
A pop-up is basically the opening of a new window in your browser.
DoubleClick provides its ad-serving clients with a means of choosing
and reporting on ads. It is the website owners or the advertisers
with whom they contract that make the decisions about the format
of the ads. The advertisers choose whether they want to have banner
ads or pop ups delivered, and they use our technology to make it
happen. The website owners and advertisers choose the size and frequency
of pop-up ads. DoubleClick has no control over which ad format website
publishers or their advertisers choose.
Generally, there are a couple of different ways that you might
receive pop up advertising:
1. The site you are currently visiting has sold an advertising
opportunity to a marketer and that marketer has chosen to create
an advertisement that opens a new browser window. This is a form
of traditional Internet advertising.
2. You have some kind of ad-delivery software installed (intentionally
or unintentionally, knowingly or unknowingly) on your computer.
This type of software often comes bundled with freeware such as
P2P (Peer-to-Peer) music sharing applications. It may track the
sites you visit and scan their contents looking for triggers that
match criteria identified by advertisers that purchased space from
the software manufacturer. The software program will then display
advertisements on your monitor.
What is spyware?
This term has been applied to a very broad range of technologies
and activities -- from the mere setting of a cookie to the surreptitious
installation of key-logging software on consumers computers.
There are many anti-spyware programs on the market and they each
have their own definition of spyware. For example, some
programs identify cookies as spyware, while others do
not. Some software programs that monitor the websites that consumers
visit in order to deliver context-based advertisements have been
categorized as adware. Many of these adware programs
are responsible for the pop-up advertisements that you see.
DoubleClick does not consider its products either spyware
or adware. We believe that consumers should be provided
meaningful notice and choice with respect to information collected
and used about them.
Google, as a third-party vendor, uses cookies to serve ads on your
site.
Google's use of the DART cookie enables it to serve ads to your users
based on their visit to your sites and other sites on the Internet.
Users may opt out of the use of the DART cookie by visiting the Google
ad and content network privacy policy
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