It is widely acknowledged that the majority of business-to-consumer (B2C) interaction is based on consumer profiling and that individuals’ data are increasingly used as a tool to elaborate and deliver personalized products and services.
With the development of automated analysis strategies and AI-based techniques, firms are able to personalize different aspects of commercial interaction, ranging from the modes of the offer—e.g. via behavioural advertising and microtargeting—to the prices and even the specific features of products.
In general terms, it has been observed that these practices are—or at least can be—welfare-enhancing if they are properly regulated. At the same time, risks related to unregulated abuse of personalized commercial practices are present and significant: using personalizing technologies to match individual users to target audiences and even to create predictive profiles might result inter alia in violation of users’ data protection and privacy, unjust discrimination based on the analysis of protected factors, and manipulation of consumers’ decision making to the detriment of competitors.
These risks operate at the crossroads of different interests and rights related to individuals and to the market as a whole; it is no surprise, therefore, that in recent times, profiling and microtargeting have found themselves at the centre of the scholarly and regulatory debate across the USA and Europe
Building on, and expanding, existing literature, the project's goal was to the effects of tailored commercial practices on consumers behaviour, contextualizing and extending the results from the main theoretical and empirical studies on the impact of targeted and personalized offers, to pinpoint their risky consequences and ultimately improve and reinterpret the existing the regulatory framework. At the same time, the project aimed at investigating how the traditional legal notions of unfairness, deception, consent and awareness could have been developed to deal with the personalization of products.