Xerox wants to extract demographic information from web surfers
The age of Big Brother everywhere is certainly upon us, and while we've seen (or at least heard of) tracking devices being implanted in the most unusual of places, it looks like Xerox is hoping to join the devilish fray. In an attempt to craft a demographic extractor to garner marketing dollars galore, a recently filed patent application spells out a system that utilizes software (and potentially hardware) to map users to "centroid vectors" which would determine a person's age, sex, and other "private" information simply based on their website visits. Interestingly, test cases are reportedly showing a respectable "75-percent accuracy rate" so long as a "sufficient number of pages were visited." Still, we can't imagine any tracing technology would be lawfully allowed behind the backs of law-abiding citizens (right?), but considering that even your TiVo has the potential to sell your soul to lucrative ad agencies, we wouldn't put it past 'em.[Via ArsTechnica]


















Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
Bliss @ Apr 12th 2007 12:03PM
Yes. Clearly patents and new technologies are needed to deduce that males visit a lot of porn sites.
"This person went to 450 porn sites last night, half of which involved absolutely unspeakable acts."
"Hmm...the program has scientifically determined that the user would be an 82-year old woman."
"Erm..."