Critics suggest the practice is marketing gone too far.
Credit: zdnet.com
Invisible pixels used to track email activity are now an "endemic" issue
that breaches our privacy, analysts suggest.
This week, the Hey messaging service analyzed its traffic following a
request from the BBC and discovered that roughly two-thirds of emails sent
to its users' private email accounts contained what is known as a "spy
pixel."
Spy pixels, also known as tracking pixels or web beacons, are invisible,
tiny image files (including .PNGs and .GIFs) that are inserted in the
content body of an email.
They may appear as clear, white, or another color to merge with the content
and remain unseen by a recipient and are often as small as 1x1 pixels.
The recipient of an email does not need to directly engage with the pixel in
any way for it to track certain activities. Instead, when an email is
opened, the tracking pixel is automatically downloaded, and this lets
a server, owned by a marketer, know that the email has been read. Servers
may also record the number of times an email is opened, the IP address
linked to a user's location, and device usage. Similar pixels are also
widely used on web domains to track visitors.
Tracking pixels have been around for some time but are not well-known. For
marketers, pixels can be an invaluable method to measure engagement levels,
estimate the success of marketing campaigns, and potentially to send
follow-ups and more personalized notes when a message has been read, but not
responded to.
However, according to Hey co-founder David Heinemeier Hansson, they also
represent a "grotesque invasion of privacy." Hansson told the publication
that on average, the company processes one million emails and over 600,000
pixel tracker attempts are blocked every day. If you bring these levels up
to the millions and millions of emails processed by services such as Gmail
or Outlook, the suggestion that pixel tracker usage is "endemic" may be
realistic.
In Europe, GDPR demands that organizations tell recipients of the use of
such pixels. However, the water has been muddied surrounding the
transparency necessary to implement pixel tracking, as consent is not always
required -- and when it is, this could be 'obtained' automatically when a
user signs up to an email service and is asked to read a privacy notice
published on a website.
The UK's own Information Commissioner's Office (ICO), which acts as a data
protection watchdog, uses pixels to track email openings in its newsletter,
as noted by the publication. Users are clearly told of the trackers at
sign-up; however, the ICO intends to remove this functionality soon.
It is possible to prevent tracking pixels from triggering by disallowing
automatic image uploads in your web browser, or by downloading email and
browser add-ons to block trackers.
Credit: zdnet.com

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