Privacy concerns are a very popular and valid talking point on Lemmy, so I would like to gather your thoughts and opinions on this. (Apologies if it’s already been discussed!)

Would you support this? Would it work or even be viable? (If it could somehow overcome the rabid resistance from these big companies). What are your thoughts?

Personally, I’m getting more and more agitated at the state of this late stage global capitalism, where companies have the gall to ask you to pay or subscribe to their products, while they already make money from you for selling your data. It’s been an issue for a long time now, but seems to really be ramping up.

  • @[email protected]
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    811 year ago

    Only I should be able to rent out my personal data to selected companies and they should pay rent monthly to retain that information. I should have termination rights with a 60 day notice.

    • @thepianistfroggollum
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      -81 year ago

      You do rent out your personal data. That’s how you pay for free services.

      • @[email protected]
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        311 year ago

        There is no rental agreement there. They straight up take your data. You should have a right who can take and use your data.

        • @thepianistfroggollum
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          01 year ago

          No, you agree to them harvesting your data when you use the service. TANSTAAFL

          • Fonzie!
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            11 year ago

            You can’t just go “whoops you clicked our link, we’re harvesting all your data now whether you like it or not!”

        • BraveSirZaphod
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          -71 year ago

          All of those services have terms and privacy policies that you are more than welcome to read, disagree with, and decide to not use the service.

          I can’t personally recall Google Data Collection Agents bursting into my home and stealing all my data, but perhaps they also wiped my memory or something.

          • @[email protected]
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            121 year ago

            Except sometimes you can’t not use the service.

            It’s completely unreasonable to expect people to quit their job just because they disagree with the terms and conditions of a single piece of software they’re required to use for work. If that service is collecting their data, there’s basically nothing they can do about it.

            • @[email protected]
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              -21 year ago

              If you use a service for job needs, this is not your data, this is your employer data. And it can request a removal as well. Moreover, corporate contracts usually are not ad based.

      • @[email protected]
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        71 year ago

        I looked it up, if a consumer opts out of the sale of personal information, the business must refrain from selling the personal information collected by the business and respect the decision to opt out for at least 12 months before requesting that the consumer opt-in to the sale of their personal information. This is required by current U.S. law.

  • @[email protected]
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    751 year ago

    Companies who obtain and sell your user information should be put out of business and have their executives and board go to prison for thousands or millions of counts of stalking.

    • @[email protected]
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      51 year ago

      But you generally literally say “yes, I permit you to use and sell my information”

      In instances where that isn’t the case, I agree with you, it’s stalking.

      • @[email protected]
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        151 year ago

        It’s far more nuanced than that. What if the company tells you they are collecting and selling your data and even give you a way to opt out, but it’s on page 28 of the Terms and Conditions.

        It should be law that companies must have a clear and transparent way to communicate data collection and what they do with said data

          • @[email protected]
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            11 year ago

            Well, this country would be a better place if we were able to adopt a lot of the sensibilities and common sense laws that the EU has. Unfortunately, we’re a plutocracy run by corporations for profit and consistently backed by an ignorant and easily susceptible generation of baby boomers that time and time again vote against their own interests.

  • @[email protected]
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    571 year ago

    Do people here responding with “It’s a free service!” not realize paid services sell your data just as much? The ISP you’re using to read this is selling your data.

    And the T&C terms are not anywhere near informed consent. They’re just permission to do anything they want with your data. Quit acting like consumer protection laws aren’t needed as long as someone clicked “I agree” to use a service required for modern life. We all know you can click “Cancel” and go live in the forest. We’d rather a third option besides exploitation and going feral.

    Also, quit licking boot. You’re killing the jobs of PR people when you shill for corporations for free.

    • @[email protected]
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      111 year ago

      just take a look at T&Cs and privacy disclaimers for auto manufacturers. Mozilla did an analysis and found all of them just stink. Imagine paying $30K for a brand new car, only to get your information sold by the dealership to shady warranty companies. The auto manufacturer selling out your data in perpetuity and listening to everything. Oh and one auto manufacturer is making claims on your sexual activity LOL

      Welcome to the unregulated market of big data in the USA

    • Fonzie!
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      21 year ago

      Man, NordVPN sells your data to Google, among others!

      This is why we can’t have good things anymore.

    • @[email protected]
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      21 year ago

      People also say “well did you pay them anything??” to excuse when an ad/data supported business abuses a member. Take Facebook, for instance. I don’t care if we’re “the product” or customers… one way or the other, they make money from people using the site.

    • @[email protected]
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      11 year ago

      I’m pretty sure ISPs don’t do this in the EU. Or, if they do, then they are in for a big hurt.

  • @[email protected]
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    511 year ago

    It all comes down to one thing:

    You agreed to the terms and agreements. You don’t have to.

    But in general… imo… it should be absolutely forbidden to sell data and governments should finally do something and stop sleeping.

    • BraveSirZaphod
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      121 year ago

      The fundamental frustration is that people want to get a thing for free without any cost or inconvenience to them in the slightest.

      And like, that’s valid - paying for things is annoying - but people generally aren’t in the habit of doing things for you for no personal gain. Put another way, it’s kinda nuts that, at no direct monetary cost, a person can access a functionally unlimited amount of video and music, can send instantaneous messages to nearly anyone on the planet, can create a personal repository of videos and images and share them with people you know, etc etc. The amount of things you can do in the modern world where the only cost is the mild annoyance of being advertised to is genuinely insane, especially given the massive technical and administrative challenges that come with running a platform like YouTube.

      And while I do understand the desire for the option to actually pay money for services instead of data, the sheer fact of the matter is that, given the choice between something costing money and it costing data, 95% of people will choose the free option.

      And at the end of the day, most of these things are not actually required to live. Even for services that are functionally necessary today, like email, there are privacy-focused services that provide it. There is simply no world in which a something like Gmail, YouTube, or Instagram exist without bringing in any revenue, because even ignoring the profit required by capitalism, running massive services like that comes with very large costs. The engineers and infrastructure alone cost a fortune, and that fortune has to come from somewhere, whether it be marketing budgets or user fees. We’re never going to get services of this nature without paying those costs in one way or another.

      • @[email protected]
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        -51 year ago

        We already pay. Every month. I pay $85/mo to access the Internet from home and an additional $90/mo to access it from my phone. Add on my streaming bills and I’m paying roughly $2400/yr already. So yeah, YouTube should be free. Gmail should be free. No ads, no privacy violations, just included in what I’m already paying.

        This used to be standard back with AOL and EarthLink. Your email was just included.

          • @[email protected]
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            21 year ago

            I’m not saying Google shouldn’t get paid. I’m saying that there are standard Internet services that are used widely enough that they could be bundled with what we already pay. We pay enough already to have those basic services included.

            So we pay the ISP, the ISP pays the service provider, and the service provider pays the content creator. We pay enough to the ISPs that we shouldn’t have to pay extra for these basic services.

              • @[email protected]
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                21 year ago

                How many people would you estimate use the internet? I’m paying $100 per month per person on my household. If you multiply $100 per month times the number of people who use the internet, I’m sure you have enough for servers, infrastructure, programmers, and plenty left over for content creators.

                Sally and I work for the same company. The company pays both of us. The customer pays the company. If the customer already pays the company, should they have to pay Sally extra for her involvement?

        • BraveSirZaphod
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          31 year ago

          …you do understand that you paying Comcast or whoever does not automatically give money to Google, right?

          Not to mention, what you’re proposing is that the cost of all major internet service be included in your monthly internet bill, so you’d be paying for all of them, even if you don’t use them. And you would find this to be an improvement?

          In case you’re unaware, running a service like YouTube is incredibly costly. The bandwidth costs alone are massive - YouTube is nearly 10% of all internet traffic - not to mention the cost of paying engineers and purchasing the infrastructure needed to support storing, processing, and streaming millions and millions of videos every day. Someone has to pay for that, whether it’s you subscribing to YouTube Premium, you watching ads, or your proposal of bundling service fees into your internet bill.

          • @[email protected]
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            01 year ago

            Oh? So my understanding of how Google profits off user data is incorrect? My belief that the ISPs are profit-driven entities is inaccurate?

            If the harvest and sale of user data had been made illegal in 1993 would Google have progressed the way it did? Would they be forced to charge a fee for their email and video hosting services? Would that have incentivized them to maybe make a deal with the ISPs to be included with the monthly payments we already make?

            What if local government owned and maintained all the existing internet infrastructure? Would we have been able to choose which ISP we preferred all these years rather than essentially having to pick between coax or satellite? Would ISPs then have been incentivized to pick up additional services like email, video, and image hosting in order to gain more customers?

            Are we experiencing the best possible version of the internet, or could it be better?

    • Semi-Hemi-Demigod
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      51 year ago

      If I go to google, do a search, and click a link they will be tracking all of that with nary a term or condition in sight.

      • @[email protected]
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        31 year ago

        I believe if you completely new (like after deleting cookies) they will make you agree to the terms and agreements before you can use the service.

      • BraveSirZaphod
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        11 year ago

        There’s a “Terms” link in the bottom right, though most people will never read it because most people don’t actually care.

        • Semi-Hemi-Demigod
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          51 year ago

          I just tried that on Firefox Focus, which is always in private browsing mode, and there was no “accept terms and conditions.”

    • @[email protected]OP
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      41 year ago

      Totally get this, and the argument that free services can only remain so from selling your data to keep running. But it just seems like such a predatory thing, there was no negotiation in this. It was just inflicted on Internet users within ridiculously lengthy terms and conditions.

      I understand the logic of it, but I completely disagree with how we got to this stage. It feels very perverse. And I am in total agreement that something definitely needs to be done- soon.

      • @[email protected]
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        11 year ago

        Absolutely.

        Ofc they use the data to make money. But there are not so many rules set to it. It feels like governments slept in this area for the past 20 years and it’s ridiculous.

        We’re so deep in its impossible to really resign from it anymore.

  • @[email protected]
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    251 year ago

    They shouldn’t be able to obtain data beyond what’s strictly necessary for the service, never mind sell it.

    People don’t understand the value of the data, and there’s no good way to put a price on it, honestly. As in, no, just because Reddit or whoever can make 5£$€ a year off me, doesn’t mean I’d be ok to sell it for 2£$€.

    • BraveSirZaphod
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      21 year ago

      I understand the ideal here, but I do genuinely wonder, if a heavy amount of data collection is necessary for complex tech services to be provided at no monetary cost, then the obvious consequence of a policy like this will be paywalls. You see that with newspapers, where even the most obnoxious level of advertising generally isn’t enough to cover costs.

      And will people actually pay money to use something like Google Search, Gmail, or Instagram? Paid e-mail providers that respect privacy already exist, and people generally don’t use them, because people don’t actually care that much. Is it really appropriate for the government to outlaw a revenue model that people have clearly revealed themselves to prefer to direct user fees?

      • @[email protected]
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        1 year ago

        The surveillance of this scale isn’t necessary. I’m not against serving me ads based on the current web page I’m on right now. Or based on the current email or search, since the provider has access to that anyway (unless it’s e2e). Or make a profile of me based on a voluntary questionnaire.

        Some companies work like that and they survive just fine. It’s absolutely not necessary to collect every little bit of detail of my life to serve me ads. It’s only the predatory companies that do that, and especially the multi-trillion corporations.

        Furthermore, those “free” services in exchange for user data may not even be good. Take Google, how they push everything that serves their needs, even if better alternatives are available (or were, before they were smothered).

        I.e. crappy quality of Google search is well documented, Chrome no comment, Drive is pushed so hard that you can’t get a Pixel phone with decent storage and most phones don’t offer memory cards because Google makes it difficult… Etc.

        So yea, I’m totally for limiting the collection of data to the barest minimum. There’s literally no downsides to anybody except to the dystopian corporations.

        Ed: that’s not even mentioning all the dark patterns these corpos use to sign you up, or how you can’t opt out or you have no choice because of monopolies. That’s not “choosing” or “agreeing”, that’s extortion.

  • @[email protected]
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    171 year ago

    yeah honestly the fraction of a cent I’d get negotiated wouldn’t make a dent in my life. I’d much rather we as a collective hold companies accountable for selling off our data. Politicians too; they’re all trying squeeze us for everything they can, and we consent by being apathetic.

  • @[email protected]
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    1 year ago

    Generally, I personally, disagree. Usually companies do not get your data from the air, they provide people service and often for free in exchange. This is a model which made internet available for masses.

    What I agree with - a transparency and control, more or less like GDPR suggests (not like it is usually implemented, though).

    • @[email protected]
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      61 year ago

      Yeah I feel like OP is suggested a world where you pay $5 a month to use Facebook, but you get the premium version for free if you sign off your rights. Maybe not a whole lot would change, except a higher awareness of the business model.

      • @[email protected]
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        21 year ago

        OP wants companies pay them. Regarding pay or watch ad (this is a usual way your data is sold): youtube, spotify and many others offer this option already now.

        • Dudewitbow
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          11 year ago

          Imo companies should at least pay for the data used by said ads. Especially the ones that needlessly throw videos at people.

    • ares35
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      21 year ago

      regulations like transparency and user control only work when the ones with the data actually follow the laws.

    • @[email protected]
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      11 year ago

      There are plenty of instances of companies collecting your data either without you knowing or without you knowing you can opt out of collection. There needs to be a set standard provided and adhered to in regards to collecting personal data.

      • @[email protected]
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        11 year ago

        Agree. And the actual attempt is called GDPR and CCo.

        However, one can put in other direction as well: similar “standards” and laws against people who try to use a service without paying for it neither watching ad nor paying money.

    • @[email protected]
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      11 year ago

      Agreed, if there’s a clear benefit to harvesting my data, like I don’t have to pay for the service then that’s fine. There should be clarity on what data is collected and how it’s used so I can decide if the benefits justify the cost.

      • ElleChaise
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        31 year ago

        That’s a good point, they shouldn’t just be allowed to say “we’re improving our product with ur info lol” and call it a day. How? Like our tax money in my country, I heard the Aussies get a breakdown of where the money is going. Where’s my breakdown? Where’s the breakdown for the techno spying? Lack of info seems to be the business model with both of these systems, lol.

      • @[email protected]
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        21 year ago

        There’s a chain of reporting issue. Generally, the site you’re on (outside the social media shitholes) will keep track of some identifier of who you are, and which sites you visited. Then they will share your identifier with an advertising partner to deliver you advertisements. The advertising partner will take your data and pass it off to a data management platform (Hi Oracle!) who will then attempt to link you on that site to literally everything you have ever done. They have deals with Credit card companies, TV vendors, car manufacturers, cell service providers, public databases. That’s where the sketchiness happens. The worst part of it all is that realistically, the advertisers don’t care about all that data. They almost always want some very basic demographic data that fits in the old Nielsen family demographic data: It doesn’t make any sense to advertise a Lexus or investment advice to someone making minimum wage. Politicians want to know who likely voters are. Macy’s wants to advertise at people who shop at malls. They also want “Lives within 50 miles of my business”

        The biggest worry is that the data platforms collect a lot of exact data that is not used except for super suspect Cambridge Analytica level targeted political advertising, and to add to it: They are reallllllly crappy at their jobs. I work in AdTech, so I can poke around at what they think I am and I’ve had things from “Salad Dressing lover” to being both unemployed and making $1 million/year in the same profile.

  • @[email protected]
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    1 year ago

    I agree. I’ve always thought it was weird that companies can sell our personal data including health data without our consent most of the times. And we can’t get any money in return for the value our data generates. If they said, yeah you make $1 couple of hours of you using your phone, I’d probably be a little more keen, but I also value privacy lol

    Edit: also just the amount of data collected and how much they can figure out about anyone is fucking terrifying. I like my privacy not because I have something to hide, but because no one would want a stalker who knows everything about you

      • BraveSirZaphod
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        21 year ago

        While I definitely would like better transparency on data collection practices, I don’t think that solves the fundamental frustration that people want to use a costly service without paying anything. The fact of the matter is that I think, for most people at least, if you transparently tell them “We’re going to collect a bunch of data in order to serve you targeted advertisements, and in exchange, you get to use Instagram for free”, most people will find that to be a fine deal, or at least better than paying money or not using the service at all.

    • @[email protected]
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      41 year ago

      Most of the time they give you a “free” product in return like Gmail or 15GB of “free” space.

  • @[email protected]
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    91 year ago

    If you use a company’s service without agreeing to pay them with money, you likely agreed to share your information with no strings attached. Problem there being once that’s done, your information is liable to be resold ad infinitum with no legal protection for you. What should happen is legislation that federally declares that agreement null and void, and put in its place nationwide law that dictates what companies and citizens can and can’t do with intellectual property as it pertains to someone’s personal information.

  • @[email protected]
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    91 year ago

    I’d prefer it if they simply weren’t allowed to collect it in the first place.

    And I don’t think it would be viable, because no fucking way am I giving these parasites any banking information so they could pay me a pittance of what they get. They’d fucking sell that too!

    It should be a requirement that you can see your own profile at any time, see everything they know about you, be able to edit it (including clearing it, and not with a billion checkboxes either), and lock it to prevent further modification and addition by themselves.

    • @[email protected]
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      21 year ago

      Well, partial good news for you, friend! (Assuming you’re in the US)

      California’s new CPRA law went into effect at the start of the year. As part of that law, CA residents can request to see their data, be deleted or edit it. Since it’s hard to validate whether someone is actually a resident or not, most places just allow everyone to do those things now.

      But there are some big caveats. One is that getting access to your data can be complicated. There’s a risk of, e.g. an evil-ex requesting your info in order to stalk you, so some places will just confirm or deny the info you send. “Do you have my name? How about this email address?”, etc, but you can’t say "Gimme everything for ".

      You can ask for all your personal data to be deleted. But the law says to delete everything… Which includes the fact that you made such a request, so the next time data about you arrives, the company has no record to indicate they should not collect it.

      It’s a start.

  • @[email protected]
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    1 year ago

    How much do you think your data is actually worth? Let’s take Google for example, their ad revenue in 2022 was ~$224B and they have 4.3B monthly active users. That’s only $52 per user, but if you take into account their operating expenses of $208B that drops down to $3.7 per user.

    But that’s not all, they don’t make their revenue by “selling your data”, that’s a common misconception. They make revenue by selling targeted advertisements on their systems, and targeted advertising is only useful if you actually click the ads and purchase the products.

    Now the correlation between your interests might be useful in aggregate, but for a single person this correlation data rounds down to a big fat zero, and since Lemmy users pride themselves in ad blockers and avoiding online advertisements I’m going to say that the value you personally add to Google’s revenue is a big fat zero.

    So should Google cut you a check for ~$0 per year? Honestly this conversation is a waste of time.

  • Izzy
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    71 year ago

    It would be to be a completely mutual agreement where all parties understand all the details and implications. It will probably never happen so it makes way more sense to make data harvesting and selling of user data illegal.

    • BraveSirZaphod
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      11 year ago

      On the contrary, given that people very clearly do want free access to very costly services, I think the most important thing that can be done is mandating transparency and some level of consumer control over data. Laws like the GDPR are a massive step in the right direction.