In select regions of Austin, customers can choose the vaguely named "Internet Preferences" option when they sign up for the GigaPower U-Verse high speed Internet package. The option takes $29 off the $99 per month plan, in exchange for permission to sell the user's web browsing history to advertisers.
As AT&T describes it:
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If you search for concert tickets, you may receive offers and ads related to restaurants near the concert venue.
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After you browse hotels in Miami, you may be offered discounts for rental cars there.
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If you are exploring a new home appliance at one retailer, you may be presented with similar appliance options from other retailers.
So while their description of targeted
But AT&T will not be selling personal information along with the browsing data.
Users who decide to pay a little extra for less intrusion will still have their information tracked by AT&T.
"We keep your personal information only as long as needed for business, tax, or legal purposes," AT&T spokesperson Fletcher Cook told Forbes.
AT&T's experiment comes at a time when tech giants Google, Apple, and Microsoft are finding new ways to track users through mobile to provide advertisers with increasingly detailed information.