| >>No, you didn't. You gave a list of one-sided transactions where the user has no freedom or really consent at all in the matter. I have difficulty responding to such an immature mischaracterization of what I listed. I listed a set of contractual arrangements that are now illegal. All of them could be entered into completely consensually, and cannot be reduced to being categorically one sided, given we don't know what the value of the service the user gets in exchange for their personal data will be in every instance that said contract is used. You're infantilizing people when you claim they're not capable of consenting to the sale of their personal data. In fact, no court of law would ever agree with you that these contracts are non-consensual ipso facto what the user offers, which is why the only way these kinds of contracts could be categorically disqualified is to circumvent the courts' purview of establishing consent, by resorting to statutory interventions like GDPR. And you're vastly over-simplifying the world, and overestimating your understanding of it, when you claim that such contracts could never be in the interest of the user. What you're doing is absolutely reckless. >>I'm sorry, but I cannot take seriously the idea that "if you can't sell yourself into slavery, you aren't free". Selling your personal data to someone is not slavery. Slavery is a permanent condition, affecting your future self. Personal data sold at one point in time only covers the data generated to that point in time, and does not forfeit data that is generated by your future self. |
And in that set, you predicated that the user could not revoke consent. That means that it is not a free contract.
>And you're vastly over-simplifying the world, and overestimating your understanding of it, when you claim that such contracts could never be in the interest of the user.
A contract in which one can not revoke consent is a contract in which one can never truly give consent. If I am unable to revoke my consent, then it can never be in the interest of the user, because my interest may change in the future.
>What you're doing is absolutely reckless.
No, what was absolutely reckless was the attitude of this industry that they should be entitled to suck up every last piece of data they could.
>Selling your personal data to someone is not slavery. Slavery is a permanent condition, affecting your future self.
Which is what you're pushing for. You don't want me to be able to withdraw consent later, thus my selling of data WILL affect my future self.
>Personal data sold at one point in time only covers the data generated to that point in time, and does not forfeit data that is generated by your future self.
It still affects your future self.
Once again, you have twisted this idea of "freedom" so badly, that you are claiming that it is anti-freedom for the user to have the freedom to withdraw consent! You should be ecstatic that you will now be able to exercise greater freedom than you could before. You will have that most basic of freedom to evaluate whether or not something is still in your interest, and if it's not, withdraw, without the other party still benefiting off of your information.