tailieunhanh - CONTRARY TO WHAT MARKETERS SAY, AMERICANS REJECT TAILORED ADVERTISING AND THREE ACTIVITIES THAT ENABLE IT

You can earn a maximum of four credits each year. In 2010, the amount earned to accrue one credit was $1,120. This amount changes annually. Therefore, to earn four credits in 2010 you would need to earn a minimum of $4, 480. If you operate a home-based business while living overseas, you will need to file and pay your self-employment tax which will include a Social Security and Medicare payment. All credits earned will remain in your Social Security Account, even through years when you are not working or contributing. You can only earn. | Contrary to what marketers say Americans ZZ . Reject Tailored Advertising AND THREE ACTIVITIES THAT ENABLE IT Joseph Turow Annenberg School for Communication University of Pennsylvania DC-ada9-bb60-728dc6367a7 Jennifer King University ofCalifornia Berkeley School of Law Berkeley Center for Law Technology Chris Jay Hoofnagle University of California Berkeley School of Law Berkeley Center for Law Technology Amy Bleakley Annenberg Public Policy Center University of Pennsylvania Michael Hennessy Annenberg Public Policy Center University of Pennsylvania Joseph Turow . is Robert Lewis Shayon Professor of Communication at the Annenberg School for Communication University of Pennsylvania. Among his several books are Niche Envy Marketing Discrimination in the Digital Age MIT Press 2006 and Breaking Up America Advertisers and the New Media World U of Chicago Press 1997 . Since 1999 he has conducted national telephone surveys that have moved forward public discourse on digital media marketing and privacy. Several can be found at the Annenberg Public Policy Center website . Jennifer King MIMS is a . student at the UC Berkeley School of Information. Most recently she was a researcher at the Samuelson Law Technology and Public Policy Clinic at UC Berkeley s School of Law. Her research areas include information privacy and security usability and human-computer interaction video surveillance and other sensor networks. With Chris Hoofnagle King has published three reports exploring Californians privacy attitudes these are available at . Chris Jay Hoofnagle . is director of the Berkeley Center for Law Technology s information privacy programs and senior fellow to the Samuelson Law Technology Public Policy Clinic. He is an expert in information privacy law. Hoofnagle co-chairs the annual Privacy Law Scholars Conference. He is licensed to practice law in California and Washington DC. Amy Bleakley . MPH is a Research Scientist in the Health .

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