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by o8r3oFTZPE
1754 days ago
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I wouldnt trust any of them to be honest. Privacy policies really arent worth anything. I would look for websites that generally do not ask for data. Then send them the minimum data you can get away with. I would avoid "signing in" or "signing up" to any website. There is an immense amount of data and information available from free from the web, no "account" is necessary. For example I dont send any extra HTTP headers like Cookies or User-Agent, I dont use Javascript. I dont request images, CSS. I dont automatically follow links in src tags. Yet I can still read and comment on HN and I can read every website posted to HN. Thats a lot of websites. I can read them just fine while not sending them any more data than is needed. Because I do not use a large, complex graphical browser sponsored by an online ad-supported vendor to make HTTP requests, I can easily control what I send. This is far better IMO than sending unknown amounts of data (letting the websites control what the browser sends via headers, Javascript and src tags) and then hoping the websites dont do things with the data that we dont like. Privacy policies do not limit websites from collecting data nor do they limit how the data can be used. They are "policies" not agreements. If a website operator does things behind the scenes that violate privacy but that it does not disclose in a "privacy policy" what can a user do. How would the user even know. Or the website could clearly violate their own "privacy policy", but no one outside the website's operators would know. Even if users discover the violation, what would be the repurcussions. Its too late, because a violation means privacy has been blown. Show me a case where a tech company got sued for violating a privacy policy. How can anyone prove a violation if the operations of the website are not open for public inspection. |
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Your observations are correct, the regulation is able to deal with the damage after it was done, and apply some form of punishment after the fact. It takes whistleblowers and activists to reveal some of the wrongdoings, otherwise the violations remain unknown to us.
Therefore there has to be a greater push towards proactive measures - letting people vote with their wallet by making informed choices; the prerequisite for that is for the relevant information to be available to them.
Have a look at some of the research I've been involved in, we're trying to solve this exact problem: http://privacy-facts.eu/