Interesting article in today’s WSJ regarding data
collection and it nefarious uses. It starts off telling the story of an anonymous
woman who had her ex use social media against her. Posting her personal
information (address and physical attributes) on dating sites and other more
secretive sites; men we are propositioning her at her home (harassment).The article
further explains that data can be weaponized. Geoffrey Folwer explains further
that “Meanwhile, data aggregators send their bots to collect anything and
everything they can about you: addresses, browsing habits, even estimated net
worth. Then they glue it all together, facts and wild guesses alike, into
dossiers. That’s the legal side of data collection. Things get scarier when
your tax accountant, credit-card company or email provider gets hacked”. The
article touches on so points I have made earlier in my Blog about the prevalence
of AI. There is an entire industry making billions of dollars mining you and it
has tripled in size in the last 5 years. The FCC has rolled back restrictions
on the data your internet service provider can collect. It’s about
self-determination. “If people don’t have the ability to control or understand
how their data is being used, it can lead to severe difficulties,” says Julie
Brill, a former FTC commissioner and current partner at the law firm Hogan
Lovells, who helped lead a big investigation of data collectors. Ms. Brill goes
on to point out the current laws only protect your health and financial data
(which are very important indeed), but still not enough. Fowler for the column
took a half dozen volunteers and submitted them to a study to see how much
“creepy data” he could find on his subjects in an hour; he managed to “shock
everyone”. He sorted the searches into 3 levels; “level one was calling up
what’s out there and totally public. Lots of people have googled themselves,
but fewer are familiar with “people search engines” like FamilyTreeNow.com and
Spokeo, which pull together and cross-reference public data, such as property
records and court reports, into one place. Anyone can use them to look for birth
dates, current and former addresses, phone numbers, gobs of relatives—even
ex-lovers and roommates. Although FamilyTree and Spokeo have their legitimate
uses they are the go to source for online harassers and impersonators. Level
two Folwer used Google Maps, Maps TimeLine which demonstrates how “Google is
gathering a dossier about you that would make a spy jealous. Depending on how
much you use Google products, there could be an hour-by-hour map of everywhere
you’ve ever visited. Yes, everywhere. On Google’s My Activity site, you can see
everything else they’re cataloging: searches, websites you visit in Chrome,
YouTube videos you watch, even recordings of your voice to Google’s Assistant”.
This article/study further demonstrate what I think most of us who follow this
technology and data analytics, realize already, there is no such thing as
privacy anymore. If you look at media your average citizen can become a star or
be destroyed depending on if someone records you and if it goes viral or not.
These are extraordinary times where everyone in connected and mostly anything
Is for sale (data). My hope is that the FCC starts to develop common sense
legislation to assist people who are having their lives destroyed, or have the
possibility of having their lives destroyed. Fowler plans to expand next week
further on this topic and I will look to follow-up on this discussion.
And on top of it all, now Google is publicly bragging about how they now own 70% of all credit card transaction data. Definitely a brave new world...
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