"Audience segments" is a pretty general term for... well, segmenting their readership so that advertisers can target specific groups. They could be doing this based on what articles you read, your geographical location, or whatever else it is, including possibly just asking you. It doesn't say much about the degree of kosher they will abide by.
That said, removing 3rd party data is a big deal, because 3rd party data is consistently one of the worst offenders but also one of the simpler ways to make your advertising slots more valuable.
At face value, it means:
1. They are not buying/using data gathered about you from elsewhere by other companies and other websites.
2. They are still directly analyzing data they gather about you from sites owned by NYT.
3. They could still use data gathered from sites affiliated with NYT using NYT trackers, if that's something NYT does. No idea if NYT does it.
> 3. They could still use data gathered from sites affiliated with NYT using NYT trackers, if that's something NYT does. No idea if NYT does it.
NYT seems to do this with sites they own like The Wirecutter. Even privacy preferences are controlled by shared infrastructure. For example, thewirecutter.com uses https://purr.nytimes.com/v1/directives, which serves this JSON. Presumably the values depend on which regulations you're covered by:
Thanks for sharing. It’s interesting to see how they’re implementing it.
From the perspective of GDPR at least, I’m pretty sure NYT and its owned sites count as one controller/processor, and I think passes the sniff test for case #2 rather than case #3.
That said, removing 3rd party data is a big deal, because 3rd party data is consistently one of the worst offenders but also one of the simpler ways to make your advertising slots more valuable.
At face value, it means:
1. They are not buying/using data gathered about you from elsewhere by other companies and other websites.
2. They are still directly analyzing data they gather about you from sites owned by NYT.
3. They could still use data gathered from sites affiliated with NYT using NYT trackers, if that's something NYT does. No idea if NYT does it.