22 Oct 2025
14:00 -15:30
Times are shown in local time
Open to: All
Lecture Theatre 1 (Cambridge Judge Business School)
Trumpington St
Cambridge
CB2 1AG
United Kingdom
Many online platforms generate revenue through targeted advertising, which depends on access to detailed consumer data. While platforms collect information directly from their users, they can also track both users’ and non-users’ off-platform browsing behaviour, allowing them to build consumer profiles that are valuable to advertisers. In this context, data externalities arise when user-provided data (such as demographic information) enables platforms to infer non-users’ characteristics, raising important privacy concerns. Focusing on Meta’s Facebook, we provide empirical evidence on the extent of off-platform tracking and quantify data externalities. We first demonstrate that Facebook monitors a substantial portion, over 40%, of online activity for both users and non-users of the platform. We then train a machine learning model using only data from Facebook users to identify patterns that link individuals’ browsing behaviour with their demographic attributes. Applying this model to non-users’ browsing data, we find that Facebook can infer non-users’ demographic characteristics with significantly higher accuracy than random guessing, providing evidence of data externalities. We further examine the impact of the European General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) and find that while the regulation reduced Facebook’s tracking of non-users by over a third, it only marginally decreased data externalities by 1.4%. Our findings suggest that even with stricter privacy regulations, platforms can infer personal information from off-platform tracking, limiting the effectiveness of policies aimed at enhancing consumer privacy.
Christian Peukert is an Associate Professor of Digitisation, Innovation and Intellectual Property at HEC Lausanne, University of Lausanne. His research focuses on the impact of digitisation on consumers, firms and markets, with a particular interest in intellectual property, data economics and artificial intelligence. He is also the Principal Investigator at the Digital Markets Lab.
Dr Peukert earned his Doctorate in Economics (summa cum laude) from LMU Munich in 2014 and has held academic positions at ETH Zurich, Católica-Lisbon School of Business and Economics and the University of Zurich. His work has received several awards, including the INFORMS Information Systems Society Cluster Best Paper Award (2024) and the Strategy Science Conference Best Paper Award (2022).