|
|
|
|
|
by pdonis
875 days ago
|
|
> If the law does not penalize selling that information This is a different proposal from what you made before. This proposed law would not require users to be paying customers (so apps could still have a free tier). It would just require that sensitive personal information gained from apps not be sold to third parties for profit, as is now required for phone records. The effect would be similar, since the ad-supported business model largely relies on such selling of information. But it would be a narrower restriction, because there are many apps with free tiers that do not use the ad-supported business model. That said, the obvious way to game this law is the definition of "sensitive information". This was never an issue for phone operators because their users are already their customers; people pay for phone service. So there is no incentive for phone operators to try to monetize whatever sensitive information they could harvest, so for them "sensitive information" basically means "whatever information you collect from phone calls" and there is no pressure to manipulate that definition. But it would be a huge issue for Big Social Media, and I would expect them to work very hard to gerrymander the definition of "sensitive information" so it doesn't really restrict their operations. If they failed and a law like this got passed, would they then actually do the hard work to make all their users paying customers? I still doubt it, but perhaps somewhat less than for the broader law I took you to be proposing before. |
|
Same as I did not give you a full definition of what “phone records” means, but the relevant law has it.
> This proposed law would not require users to be paying customers
If it’s made illegal to profit from users through such indirect means, then there would be no choice for companies but to require users to be paying customers.
The core issue is not that users don’t pay, but that they are the product (and that hurts the users and distorts how market works, preventing competition). That’s what legislation could address. Whether users pay or not simply follows from market mechanics.
Companies can still provide subsidized accounts for disadvantaged families and cover the costs by charging premium users more, for example, if they want to.
> But it would be a huge issue for Big Social
Absolutely, it’s probably their worst nightmare ;)