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Tivo Users Freaked by Having Viewing Habits Tracked

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Janet Jackson's Super Bowl flash dance was shocking in more ways than one: Some TiVo users say the event brought home the realization that their beloved digital video recorders are watching them, too.

On Monday, TiVo said the exposure of Jackson's breast during her halftime performance was the most-watched moment to date on its device, which, when combined with the TiVo subscription service, lets viewers pause and "rewind" live television broadcasts, among other features.

TiVo said users had watched the skin-baring incident nearly three times more than any other moment during the Super Bowl broadcast, sparking headlines that dramatically publicized the power of the company's longstanding data-gathering practices.

"It's just sort of creepy," longtime TiVo subscriber Sandra Munozshe wrote in an e-mail to CNET News.com.

A TiVo spokesman said the company operates well within established privacy standards. For years, TiVo has disclosed its data-gathering practices in user agreements, saying it strips out any information that could be traced back to an individual viewer.

While conceivably, TiVo could investigate an individual's viewing habits, it doesn't, a spokesman said. But it does occasionally mine data from a random sampling of 20,000 homes viewing a particular program, as it did during the Super Bowl.

"I can understand people's concerns," said spokesman Scott Sutherland. "But when weighted against reality, they are unfounded."

Privacy issues hitherto associated mainly with PCs are beginning to ripple into the living room with the arrival of new devices, such as digital video recorders (DVRs), that offer interactive features. Once one-way receivers, televisions and even radios are becoming two-way devices capable of sending information back to service providers. The shift promises to fundamentally change the ground rules for media, which increasingly must adhere to new privacy standards to ensure that new technologies aren't abused in the name of demographics and the like.

The minicontroversy over privacy at TiVo underscores growing consumer awareness over industry practices that have been standard for years on the Internet but are only now beginning to spill out into other media. DVRs, which function like a VCR but record shows on a hard disk instead of on videotape, bring interactive features to TV that promise to transform the industry. Among other things, the devices can recommend shows based on a given user's past viewing choices, pause live programming and skip commercials.

Since they let consumers jump quickly over ads, DVRs have been in the spotlight as a potential thorn in the side of network TV. But the networks have also been tantalized by the devices' ability to track viewer behavior, intelligence that could ultimately be used to improve the effectiveness of marketing campaigns and so forth.

A full Nielsen
TiVo this week signed a deal to provide data to Nielsen Media Research, a leading provider of information on television-viewing habits. Under the agreement, TiVo will supply Nielsen with anonymous data on the habits of subscribers who have agreed to hand over their information, giving Nielsen its first look at the tendencies of DVR users. Nielsen spokesman Jack Loftus said Thursday that the next deal Nielsen reaches with TiVo, or any other DVR supplier, will involve more valuable demographic information about viewers, such as age or sex.

http://news.com.com/2100-1041_3-5154219.html?part=rss&tag=feed&subj=news
 
monsieurjohn said:
how does tivo monitor their users anyway? i thought it connected like a VCR, or does it connect to the internet too?

You plug Tivo into the phone line so that it can receive program guide information, software updates and maintain subscription status.

I heard people say it before I got one, and now I say it myself: I can't imagine not having a Tivo.
 
Tivo has never hidden the fact that they monitor user's habits. They regularly publish demographic or user statistics for major television events.
I can't imagine how someone could be shocked by this fact.
 
I have a Tivo myself. I don't find it particularly annoying that they track statistics. But thats just me. I think the service itself is the most awesome thing that ever happened to Television. It really makes it easy to be able to watch what you want, when you want.

Just because they are also recording info for marketing IMHO is not a big deal.

Scott
 
That's true, SwissMiss. People are so quick to sign on the dotted line that they don't bother to read anything important. I ALWAYS read what I'm signing. I don't care if the other person is in a hurry, impatient, annoyed or insulted - don't sign your name to anything you may be sorry for later.
 
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