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xchrom

(108,903 posts)
Wed Oct 9, 2013, 06:15 AM Oct 2013

How Private Tech Companies Are Collecting Data on You and Selling Them to the Feds for Huge Profits

http://www.alternet.org/civil-liberties/how-private-tech-companies-are-collecting-data-you-and-selling-them-feds-huge

Big Bro is watching you. Inside your mobile phone and hidden behind your web browser are little known software products marketed by contractors to the government that can follow you around anywhere. No longer the wide-eyed fantasies of conspiracy theorists, these technologies are routinely installed in all of our data devices by companies that sell them to Washington for a profit.

That’s not how they’re marketing them to us, of course. No, the message is much more seductive: Data, Silicon Valley is fond of saying, is the new oil. And the Valley’s message is clear enough: we can turn your digital information into fuel for pleasure and profits -- if you just give us access to your location, your correspondence, your history, and the entertainment that you like.

Ever played Farmville? Checked into Foursquare? Listened to music on Pandora? These new social apps come with an obvious price tag: the annoying advertisements that we believe to be the fee we have to pay for our pleasure. But there’s a second, more hidden price tag -- the reams of data about ourselves that we give away. Just like raw petroleum, it can be refined into many things -- the high-octane jet fuel for our social media and the asphalt and tar of our past that we would rather hide or forget.

We willingly hand over all of this information to the big data companies and in return they facilitate our communications and provide us with diversions. Take Google, which offers free email, data storage, and phone calls to many of us, or Verizon, which charges for smartphones and home phones. We can withdraw from them anytime, just as we believe that we can delete our day-to-day social activities from Facebook or Twitter.
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How Private Tech Companies Are Collecting Data on You and Selling Them to the Feds for Huge Profits (Original Post) xchrom Oct 2013 OP
The Petroleum analogy is apt, being gas money orpupilofnature57 Oct 2013 #1
+1, n/t RKP5637 Oct 2013 #2
We know the Sec.702 providers are paid, as are the data aggregators, and the telcos and ISPs. leveymg Oct 2013 #3

leveymg

(36,418 posts)
3. We know the Sec.702 providers are paid, as are the data aggregators, and the telcos and ISPs.
Wed Oct 9, 2013, 07:50 AM
Oct 2013

Pretty much every company that records your clicks has a commercial stake in feeding Big Brother. This has to stop.

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