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by jasonlotito
2822 days ago
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> Okay I now assume that all companies will harvest as much data as they can. You say harvest, as if they are taking something. The reality is, people always gave the data. The companies just kept what it was freely given. It's a bit hypocritical if I get upset that you keep something I gave you. The reality is, the problem wasn't with the users who gave the data, or the companies who kept what was given, but rather the people who made it possible to do it so easily in the first place. Browser makers share the majority of this responsibility. We look to them to create secure browsers that can't be hacked, but completely ignore the fact that they created browsers that are easily tracked. And then we adopt Chrome, a browser made by a company built on tracking. And I find it funny that Brendan Eich's creation is probably the biggest reason we are in this situation in the first place. |
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These data aggregators can build profiles on people by buying data from as many sources as possible.
How is the average user supposed to know this happens on the background when they load www.nytimes.com? How are they supposed to know that those flashy banners contain entire programs designed to track them?
How should the average user now that the ad banners on acb.com are the same as on xyz.com?
How should the average user know that a FB button on every website also tracks you. As does G+ button, as does Twiter etc...
How are regular users supposed to know how much data they produce online.
Honestly it even scares me to see how many JS is loaded on average websites. Just for tracking, just for profile building.
This isn't given. It's taken.