on 10-11-2016 13:28
on 10-11-2016 13:28
on 10-11-2016 13:32
No they don't read your texts.
However you should go into My O2 and turn of marketing info http://www.o2.co.uk/myo2
Veritas Numquam Perit
on 10-11-2016 13:32
No they don't read your texts.
However you should go into My O2 and turn of marketing info http://www.o2.co.uk/myo2
Veritas Numquam Perit
on 10-11-2016 13:34
on 10-11-2016 13:34
on 10-11-2016 13:37
on 10-11-2016 13:37
Find marketing preferences here (in My O2)
Veritas Numquam Perit
on 10-11-2016 13:40
on 10-11-2016 13:40
on 10-11-2016 13:44
on 10-11-2016 13:44
on 10-11-2016 13:47
on 10-11-2016 13:47
on 10-11-2016 14:28
on 10-11-2016 14:28
Someone somewhere will be reading your texts apart from the recipient.....:smileywink:
on 10-11-2016 17:01
If you have previously searched for, or looked at the web site of, those coffee cups, then your computer/phone/tablet may well have led to your "Advertising ID" being linked to those cups as actively interested. This is a cookie placed on your computer that is just a code number, linked to a central database. The data linked to that Advertising ID might in turn might be looked at by O2 when their system is about to send you a marketing text.
You accept the placing of cookies on your computer when you ignore or click OK to the pop up that appears ON THE FIRST TIME that you visit a particular web site.
You may also find that such adverts about coffee cups turn up on Amazon, Google, within Facebook and Twitter feeds...
Some sites have settings to turn off personalised adverts, though likely well hidden. Their logic is that you'd rather read adverts about things you have an interest in than things you never heard of. Oh, and perhaps things that you might actually buy so that the advert is worthwhile.
You can turn on "Do Note Track" in moist web browsers, but it is a request not a must to the sites you visit.
It is one of the marvels of technology; the way that you can be tracked in your meanderings across the web. And how that can be used for or against you.