Comment No, she sounds like a great choice. (Score 5, Informative) 619
O'Connor Kelly sounds like a good choice for this position. DoubleClick was
one of the most grevious privacy offenders on the internet, probably the absolute
worst. They were so bad that even the FTC (Federal Trade Commission) got into the
act. They're banner ads would abuse bugs in browsers to set cookies that would be
able to track you from everywhere by using subdomains of base domains such as .co.uk (most browsers assumed you could set a parent if it was a high level
domain like example.com or example.net just by counting the number of dots, but
you can't register example.uk, only example.co.uk, so you could effectively
set cookies for every purchasable domain) and other nasty tricks. They claimed
that they didn't store personal data, but it was obvious that they were monitoring
and corrolating everything they could, and the wide number of websites that used
doubleclick meant they had a huge repository of data to mine.
O'Connor Kelly came in after DoubleClick was shown to be, well, evil when it came to privacy, to clean things up. Many changes have occured at DoubleClick to fix some of the problems. Given the amount of data DoubleClick had and what they did with it, O'Connor Kelly should have an excellent idea of what abuses you can do when you have that sort of information.
Hopefully she can step in and help prevent that sort of thing from happening at this level too.