|
|
|
|
|
by jfoutz
3369 days ago
|
|
I think you overestimate the average politician. They may not bother with the internet. I'm confident Senator Lamar does not. But really, i don't think it would take very long to figure out where he and his staff in DC and in Tennessee live. I don't know what the data purchase rates are, so that could be expensive. But buy the data for a bunch of neighborhoods. Perhaps 50,000 people. watch the data for a while, query strings with Lamar would be good indicators. Heck, make some really finely targeted ads on Facebook. I think the reality is most news sourced this way would be super tabloidish. i mean, you're going to figure out what porn they look at faster than what policy they're developing. |
|
There are all sorts of problems like this. What could you learn from the browsing history of people that work in sensitive areas? i.e. nuclear facilities, national labs, financial/industry regulators, etc. City and state representatives probably give away a lot through browsing. There's plenty of low lying fruit ripe for exploiting in huge ways.
Another avenue: merely knowing when someone is likely to browse the internet tells you:
-they're awake
-they're at home/indications of their location
-their level of awareness (think security workers or even prison guards)
Imagine being able to figure out the best time of day to hit a bank by browsing history? In an aggregate way you could probably figure out staffing (corporate level) or whether someone's home (residential level).