Despite the fact that WhiteHouse.gov has switched from an embedded YouTube player to its own flash-based, Akamai-powered embedded media player, Google claims the media is overreacting to the switch. Privacy advocates have been pressuring the government over tracking cookies associated with YouTube.Google is not happy about media reports that the White House has switched
from Google-owned YouTube in favor of a flash-based embedded media player
powered by Akamai Technologies. The White House made the unannounced move Feb.
28 after privacy advocates questioned the implications of having users of WhiteHouse.govthe
White House's official sitegetting tagged with a YouTube tracking cookie.
Throughout his successful campaign for the White House, President Obama made
extensive use of YouTube to communicate his message. After Obama took office,
the White House continued to use YouTube as a vehicle of choice, particularly
for Obama's weekly video chats. After the switch to cookieless Akamai, one news
organization trumpeted that the White House had "ditched" YouTube.
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objections to President Obama's BlackBerry smartphone.
"That report is wrong. The White House decision does not mean that the
White House has stopped using YouTube," Steve Grove of YouTube News and
Politics wrote March 2 on the Google Public Policy Blog. "The White House
continues to post videos to its YouTube channel, as do other agencies like the
U.S. Department of Education and the State Department. These channels are part
of a broader effort within the General Services Administration to help
federal agencies communicate directly with citizens on YouTube."
The privacy complaints came from organizations such as the EFF (Electronic
Frontier Foundation) and the CDC (Center for Digital Democracy), who argued
that the White House shouldn't be in the business of tracking users. The White
House first responded by ensuring that tracking cookies didn't kick in until
the user actually clicked on the video.
"While we applaud this fast response to some of the privacy concerns that
have been raised, it is our understanding that the recent change does not
eliminate all of the issues associated with the use of cookies on a government
Web site and also does not address privacy concerns that are not specific to
cookies," the EFF wrote in a Jan. 27 letter to the office of the White
House Counsel.
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reality of secure networks? Click here to read about how an Internet-focused
campaign adapted to White House restrictions.
Before Obama's Feb. 28 weekly video address, the White
House implemented its new policy of eliminating all cookies by placing the
embedded video player on government servers. White House spokesperson Nick
Shapiro said the changes were an experiment as the administration continues to
find its way through the thicket of government regulations.
"As the president continues his goal of making government more accessible
and transparent, this week we tested a new way of presenting the president's
weekly address by using a player developed in-house," Shapiro said in a
statement. "This decision is more about better understanding our internal
capabilities than it is a position on third-party solutions or a policy. The
weekly address was also published in third-party video-hosting communities and
we will likely continue to embed videos from these services on WhiteHouse.gov
in the future."
The EFF said March 2 it is happy with the adapted White House video policy, but
privacy questions still remain. "Even with this change, there will be room
for further improvement," the EFF said in a March 2 blog posting.
"YouTube cookies are not the only third-party Web tracking technology in
use on government Web sites There is still the issue of 'invisible pixel'-style
Webbug/tracker[s] on every page on the site, hosted by WebTrends.com, which
raises equally important concerns."