> but nobody is actually trying to show you an ad because you’re on the corner of Scott and Fulton in San Francisco (despite various paranoias to the contrary).
The paranoia isn't about that. It is more about...
> The problem is that programmatic advertising, while perhaps the most technically sophisticated way to buy and sell ads, is leaky when it comes to data, almost necessarily
> This isn’t something uniquely nefarious; just about every app you use that has ads
Well then, at least it isn't "uniquely" nefarious.
Did the priest do anything, or was he just gay? I am aware of the hypocrisy of the catholic church on such topics, but was there something else?
> but nobody is actually trying to show you an ad because you’re on the corner of Scott and Fulton in San Francisco (despite various paranoias to the contrary).
The paranoia isn't about that. It is more about...
> The problem is that programmatic advertising, while perhaps the most technically sophisticated way to buy and sell ads, is leaky when it comes to data, almost necessarily
> This isn’t something uniquely nefarious; just about every app you use that has ads
Well then, at least it isn't "uniquely" nefarious.
Did the priest do anything, or was he just gay? I am aware of the hypocrisy of the catholic church on such topics, but was there something else?