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by kbenson
2494 days ago
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The person in question has a relationship with the credit card company, in that they have requested and use the credit card (and if they aren't using it, nothing is being collected). I agree that opting into collection automatically is less than ideal, and I don't want it to happen, but this isn't some third party getting between some other nefarious third party and myself, it's them injecting themselves into an ongoing business relationship between two parties. You can label them surveillance companies all you want, and in some contexts it might be the most fitting description. In this context, I would say it's more fitting to say they are contractual partners abusing the looseness of the contract for their own benefit. Just in case you missed where this particular thread started, the top level comment is about the opt out forms for data collection at Visa and MasterCard, and the reply's (possibly somewhat in jest) suggestion that since the CAPTCHA is so simple, someone just use whatever card numbers they have access to to opt people out automatically. All my comments are specifically in that context, which is one of random third parties using card numbers they shouldn't have direct access to anyway to alter the business relationship of others without authorization. |
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Furthermore, I do not view a person's associating with Visa/MC in today's society to be in any way voluntary - opting out is only possible at significant personal expense. So the mere existence of a business relationship also cannot be a basis for general consent. (As an aside: people generally do not contract with Visa/MC directly)
Taken together, these put "abuse" of a "business relationship" is in the exact same category as interjected actions by "third" parties - unwanted transgressions. They only feel different because we've become fatigued to accepting these transgressions when they pad someone else's bottom line.
And yes I am aware of the context of the discussion. I wouldn't personally do such a thing, but that doesn't mean I wouldn't applaud someone who did.