“Internet users have become inured to the relentless
collection of their personal information online. Imagine, for example, if
getting your suit pressed at the dry cleaner's automatically and permanently
signed you up to have scores of inferences about you — measurements, gender, race,
language, fabric preferences, credit card type — shared with retailers,
cleaning product advertisers and hundreds of other dry cleaners, who themselves
had arrangements to share that data with others. It might give you pause.
But that’s the daily reality on the internet. Every minute
a person spends online helps countless companies build a thicker dossier about
that person.
Despite what corporations profess, much of this personal
data is used not to improve products themselves, but to make those products
more attractive to advertisers.
One straightforward solution is to let people opt in to
data collection on apps and websites. Today, with few exceptions, loads of
personal data are collected automatically by default unless consumers take
action to opt out of the practice — which, in most cases, requires dropping the
service entirely.”
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