The Ongoing Saga

Copy-and-paste of the email I received back from the NYT online:

Thanks for your letter inquiring about our registration policy.

Different news organizations on the Web do different things in order to
earn enough revenue to provide their services. The Wall Street Journal, for
example, charges $79 a year for access to its site. Several others request
a zip code or a birth date in order to use a particular service, or gather
information about readers and their viewing habits gradually through
“cookies” as they travel a site. Some sites do nothing at all;
many of those sites are losing not insignificant amounts of money.

In our case, we ask our readers to answer a few questions on our
registration form. As stated in our Privacy Policy, linked from the bottom of
our home page http://www.nytimes.com, the information we gather
from our individual readers is kept strictly confidential. The major use of
this information is to allow readers to see advertising that is most likely to
interest them. Advertisers present their messages to people who are most likely
to be receptive, improving both the viewer’s experience and the effectiveness of the ads.

The information we gather also allows us to learn how various types of
readers respond to the features we provide, helping us to improve our
services.

We understand that some people find our registration questions too intrusive
to answer. For those people, access to The New York Times is available by
purchasing the newspaper, which can be obtained on many newsstands or
delivered by visiting our home delivery Web site at http://1-800.nytimes.com.

Thanks for your interest.

Sincerely,
Leonard M. Apcar
Editor in Chief
The New York Times on the Web
www.nytimes.com

—–Original Message—–
From: (i don’t need any spambots finding this, kthx)
Date: Friday, January 07, 2005 12:07 AM
To: feedback@nytimes.com (feedback@nytimes.com)
Subject: Registration

Subject: Registration
Subscriber ID:
E-mail: (i don’t need any spambots finding this, kthx)

To whom it may concern:

I just clicked another link from a site I read to an NYT article and it led me to the registration page for your website. I declined to register and instead looked for this contact form. The first time this ever happened to me I entered real info. For later occurrences having long forgotten my login I started to enter bogus info. Then I used bug-me-not. Then I decided that whatever you had to say couldn’t be important enough for me to be bothered with this registration business. The real important news is all on other sites or the AP anyway.

Maybe you don’t care what I have to say, but I’m telling you in the hopes that you do. I have resolved not to bother reading sites that require such registration. I also decline to use grocery discount cards even if my food comes at a slightly higher price. There are others like me, and may I humbly suggest that if you value our readership and our advertising hits, sigh you quit the registration thing. Until such time as that is the case, I will continue to avoid the New York Times both in print and on the web.

You have my real, full-time email address now, and I kindly request that you don’t use it to send me anything other than a reply to this message.

Thank you for your time.

–Brock

Please tell me your full name, social security number, and what kind of salad dressing you prefer

While there are a lot of things about myself I’m always l0oking to improve, I generally avoid New Years’ (where does the apostrophe go?) resolutions.

This year I’m making an exception.

This year, I vow not only to myself but to you, the reader out on the intarweb, that I shall actively resist all attempts to gain personal information about me for marketing purposes. Lord knows that with brocktice.com and all the associated stuff I post, my life’s not a real secret out in what Carl of ATHF refers to as ‘Cyberland’. (period placement intentional — I’m a programmer) However, I’m sick of this crap. I just wrote the NYT online to inform them that I won’t even bother to fill in fake info any more. I’m just not reading any more NYT articles, regardless of how many people and sites link to them. No ad revenue for them. Furthermore, except perhaps in the case of an emergency, I will refuse to purchase from a store if they require personal info for the sale. For things being shipped this is unavoidable. However, Circuit City, Radio Shack, grocery stores, and other companies that like to stick their noses into my business will get a cold shoulder. Granted, if I simply avoided these stores for their inquiries my life could get pretty tough.

When asked for this info, I’m always on the verge of asking, “Can I make this purchase without telling you that?” but never do. This is the year I start asking questions, and talking to managers when the answers aren’t favorable. If I really can’t buy it without telling them, fine. I’ll make do.

You should too. But that’s just, like, my opinion, man.

Work in Progress

Hey, I’m working on the color scheme. Later, who knows, maybe I’ll add images to the layout. Crazy-go-nuts! Please be patient with the color scheme. Not like anyone actually looks at this site anyway. The few that do get it through aggregators, no doubt.