http://rt.com/usa/news/verizon-patent-future-television-382/
Think Google ad targeting is crossing the line? Verizon filed a
patent for a cable television box that uses sensors to record what
you’re doing and target you with specific advertisements that relate to
your mood.
The telecom giant Verizon wants to know you better. Much better. The
company just registered a patent for its DVR of the future. The set-top
box would use a depth sensor, an image sensor, an audio sensor and a
thermal sensor to determine what those watching television are doing. If
a couple is having an argument in front of the TV, a marriage
counseling ad may come up. If two people are cozying up, Verizon may put
up an ad for contraceptives or a romantic getaway.
The sensors
would also be able to detect where someone is looking. If the viewer is
watching a certain ad, Verizon might use that as an indicator to play
similar ads in the future.
“If detection facility detects one
or more words spoken by a user (e.g. while talking to another user
within the same room or on the telephone), advertising facility may
utilize the one or more words spoken by the user to search for and/or
select an advertisement associated with the one or more words,” Verizon wrote in its application.
Rather than watching television, television will be watching its viewers.
But
even pets and inanimate objects could become a part of the targeted
advertising. The detection facility would in some cases be able to
identify animals (such as dogs, cats, and birds), retail products with
brand images or words (such as a bag of chips or a soft drink),
furniture and decorations. Verizon would then stream ads that would
correspond to the viewer’s style or interests.
Even more intrusive
might be the DVR’s ability to detect and communicate with mobile
devices held by viewers. If Verizon senses a mobile phone being used, it
may “communicate with the mobile device to limit the content accessible by the way of the mobile device”, as well as stream advertisements that correspond to what the viewer is looking at on his or her phone.
If
Verizon proceeds with its plans, the technology may bring Big Brother
into the households of millions of Americans, giving the tech company a
strategic advantage over what Americans watch on their devices.
The company would always know whether a user is “eating,
exercising, laughing, reading, sleeping, talking, singing, humming,
cleaning, playing a musical instrument, performing any other suitable
action, and/or engaging in any other physical activity during the
presentation of the media content,” according to the patent.
The
paperwork was filed by Verizon in 2011, but the patent filings weren’t
required to be released by the US Patent and Trademark Office for 18
months.
Verizon officials declined to comment on the patent when
questioned by the media source FierceCable, but released a statement to
CBS Radio about the issue of privacy.
“Verizon has a
well-established track record of respecting its customers’ privacy and
protecting their personal information. As a company that prizes
innovation, Verizon takes pride in its innovators whose work is
represented in our patents and patent applications. While we do not
comment on pending patent applications, such futuristic patent filings
by innovators are routine, and whatever we might do in the future would
be in line with our well-established track record of respecting our
customers’ privacy and protecting their personal information,” the statement reads.
While
the patent may not represent plans for current technology, it may
provide a glimpse into the future – a future where every private action
becomes the interest of a major corporation.
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