Slashdot Mirror


Your Data Footprint Is Affecting Your Life In Ways You Can't Even Imagine (fastcoexist.com)

An anonymous reader cites the following excerpts from a FastCoExist article: Innocently clicking on a link results in ad targeting that's hard to shake and our purchases quickly reveal more information than we intend, such as the infamous example of Target knowing a woman is pregnant before she's told her family -- and before she's purchased any baby products. [...] Predictions about you are deeply shaping your life in ways of which you are probably blissfully unaware. Predictions about you (and millions of other strangers) are starting to deeply shape your life. Your career, your love life, major decisions about your health and well-being, and even if you end up in jail, are now being governed in no small part by the digital bread crumbs you've left behind -- many of which you don't even know you've dropped in the first place.

8 of 191 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Possible solution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    a physical store with cash

    What are you trying to hide, citizen? You have been flagged for closer surveillance.

    (Already not having a "social media profile" is seen as a bit deviant and can easily hurt your career prospects, and use of encrypted communications is considered suspicious. It's not going to be long at this rate).

  2. Re:Possible solution by PolygamousRanchKid+ · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Only buy routine items online. For anything that requires a bit of discretion, buy it at a physical store with cash.

    I wouldn't be surprised if the FBI and NSA start requiring retailers to log cash purchases on their systems.

    --
    Schroedinger's Brexit: The UK is both in and out of the EU at the same time!
  3. Not just ads by ahziem · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It's not just ads: financial companies track your transactions, and by default, they share your information with "partners." Scroll through your credit card usage, and you can quickly imagine how your trips to Starbucks can be used to build a valuable profile. To opt out, they make you mail a paper form because they hope you will be too lazy to find a stamp. Of course, Facebook tracks everything.

    1. Re:Not just ads by kheldan · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Of course, Facebook tracks everything

      Reminder: You're a dope if you use Facebook, or any other 'social media' platform. It's like smoking: If you're doing it, you can't in any way claim you didn't know it was a bad idea, but you're doing it anyway. These are not survival traits.

      --
      Are YOU using the TOOL, or is the TOOL using YOU? Think about it!
    2. Re:Not just ads by jratcliffe · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Of course, Facebook tracks everything

      Reminder: You're a dope if you use Facebook, or any other 'social media' platform. It's like smoking: If you're doing it, you can't in any way claim you didn't know it was a bad idea, but you're doing it anyway. These are not survival traits.

      Reminder: the fact that you don't find the costs associated with using a service to be worth the benefits doesn't mean that people who do understand that tradeoff, and find it worthwhile, are "dope[s]."

  4. Re:About that Target pregnancy thing by tlhIngan · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I had a talk with a person a while ago about that scenario where I took the Devil's Advocate side of the discussion. Is it really such a horrible thing that Target knows before the family? The lady obviously knows, and it's her secret to tell, so what's the big deal with Target keeping the secret?

      I mean, before big data and big stores, the same clerk might have seen you buy the pregnancy test and then the next day see you buy prenatal vitamins. If it was a small town, even if it wasn't the same cashier, their might be enough gossip to connect the two and then they would know before pretty much anyone else. Before that, it might be your bank processing checks, or the credit card company, or whatever. That particular example wasn't super-secret stuff that only a big computer with big data could have figured out.

    Except Target didn't keep it a secret.

    You see, Target has done their market research. They found that the birth of child is the ideal time to shape shopping habits - if a husband and wife shopped at Target for a few basic essentials, then went elsewhere for clothes, groceries and other things before a birth, after a birth, they are highly suggestible to change their shopping habits. So Target wants to find those that are pregnant and send them coupons for essentials they may need with the hopes of attracting them to shop more stuff at Target - get more of their shopping dollars with a family who may be pressed for time and unable to do their usual shopping rounds.

    The problem was, the daughter was making those kind of purchases, and the father wondered why Target was sending her coupons for pregnancy products. Target's analytics found her profile was basically that of a pregnant woman. So the father confronted Target management asking them why they're sending pregnancy-related coupons to their daughter (who you know, is very virtuous and wouldn't have a child out of wedlock, etc. etc. etc).

    Said father later revealed their daughter was a teenage parent a couple of weeks later.

    Target didn't tell them, but she fit the profile, and the parents didn't know until Target basically revealed it to them.

  5. Re:About that Target pregnancy thing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    "The lady obviously knows, and it's her secret to tell, so what's the big deal with Target keeping the secret?"

    The thing that bothers a lot of people isn't that target figured something out, it is that target demonstrably isn't "keeping" the secret -- they sent her pregnancy-related things that revealed the secret to her parents before she wanted them to (because fairly predictably, her parents were in the same house, and thus saw things that showed up in the mail for her).

    I don't mind starbucks knowing how much coffee I consume. I do very much mind when they sell that information to an insurance company that starts calculating my life insurance or health insurance rates. If someone is stalking me, I really don't want them to be able to buy from starbucks the information about which starbucks I use when (from which you can derive roughly where I work and my schedule).

    Lots of people browse for porn; it is fine if the provider keeps that info, but when they start selling to the local newspaper a list of people in your town organized by kink, that gets kind of disturbing. Profitable for the porn company perhaps, but most people find that sort of commercialization of data obnoxious.

    Advertisers are demonstrably tracking and sharing a lot of information that I didn't give them. When a social network that I don't have an account on starts recommending me as a "person you might know" to coworkers, that says that they've gathered information about me and my job that I never gave them, which they are now sharing with others. I really don't like that.

    You are correct that we've always had gossips around that might notice something about me and share it with others; that doesn't mean we liked them, or that we think that their behavior should be institutionalized in every corner of our lives.

  6. Re:You know what disgusts me??? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    You are more than welcome to cite evidence supporting the idea that there is massive voter fraud going on and that advanced voter verification techniques are necessary and effective in correcting the problem. Until then, I would just assume not hand over any more tax dollars for programs which provide no benefit.