On Internet Privacy and Profiling - Testimony given by Internet consultant, Richard M Smith, before the US Senate Commerce Committee (PDF format) - http://www.senate.gov/~commerce/hearings/0613smi.pdf
Network Advertising Initiative - "NAI is a group of third party network advertisers who are committed to increasing consumer confidence and contributing to the growth of electronic commerce." Part of the advertising industry's response to charges that they engage in practices - http://www.networkadvertising.org/
Privacy Online - Fair Information Practices in the Electronic Marketplace: A Federal Trade Commission Report to Congress (May 2000). (Links to full report in PDF format.) - http://www.ftc.gov/os/2000/05/index.htm#22
A new way to spend money - Political campaigns know who you are, where you're registered to vote, what party you're affiliated with -- and which Web sites you use. Presidential candidates are using Internet advertising to target likely supporters in early key primary states like I - http://www.salon.com/news/feature/1999/12/22/internet/index.html
Profits and Privacy: Internet Shopping - Online retailers are collecting information about customers and using that information to better target their ads. PBS Lehrer Newshour report on this strategic marketing. - http://www.pbs.org/newshour/bb/cyberspace/july-dec99/shopping_12-23.html
Opt-Out - "Are you tired of getting all that junk mail? Telephone calls during dinner? If you are, this site is for you." Part of the Center for Democracy and Technology. - http://opt-out.cdt.org/
Push or shove? - "Two years of careful planning by the best minds in Wall Street, Madison Avenue and Silicon Valley -- all for nothing. We need a new metaphor." From Salon. - http://www.salon.com/march97/21st/underground970306.html
High stakes in cyberspace - An examination of marketers' and advertisers' dreams for the Internet. From PBS Frontline. - http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/cyberspace/
You say you want a revolution? - Push technology, hailed as revolutionary, will do little to enrich the substance of internet interactivity. It looks more like business as usual. Article from Atlantic Monthly. - http://www.theatlantic.com/unbound/media/ws970402.htm