This article examines the complex relationship between privacy and advertising in the digital ecosystem, highlighting the fundamental tension between personalization and the protection of personal information. The privacy paradox—where individuals’ express concerns about data collection while simultaneously engaging with platforms that harvest their information—forms the central theme throughout the discussion. Beginning with an assessment of how modern advertising leverages this contradiction, the article progresses to evaluate the erosion of personal autonomy through ineffective consent mechanisms, particularly in contexts with significant power imbalances between data subjects and collectors. Behavioral targeting techniques are scrutinized as double-edged swords that enhance consumer experience while raising profound questions about psychological privacy and cognitive liberty. The economic foundations of the digital advertising landscape are dissected, revealing how personal data functions as currency in an exchange where users rarely comprehend the true value of their information. Finally, the article considers regulatory frameworks and industry self-regulation initiatives, along with emerging privacy-preserving technologies that attempt to balance personalization with protection. Throughout these interconnected themes, the article demonstrates how the commodification of personal information challenges fundamental rights while reshaping the economic foundations of the internet, creating a landscape where commercial interests, technological capabilities, and human dignity exist in precarious balance.
Keywords: Informed consent, Privacy paradox, behavioral targeting, data commodification, regulatory frameworks, surveillance capitalism