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Two-Thirds of Consumers Don't Expect Google To Track Them the Way It Does (niemanlab.org)

A significant majority of consumers do not expect Google to track their activities across their lives, their locations, on other sites, and on other platforms. Jason Kint, writing for Nieman Lab: Our findings show that many of Google's data practices deviate from consumer expectations. The results of the study are consistent with our Facebook study: People don't want surveillance advertising. A majority of consumers indicated they don't expect to be tracked across Google's services, let alone be tracked across the web in order to make ads more targeted. Nearly two out of three consumers don't expect Google to track them across non-Google apps, offline activities from data brokers, or via their location history.

There was only one question where a small majority of respondents felt that Google was acting according to their expectations. That was about Google merging data from search queries with other data it collects on its own services. They also don't expect Google to connect the data back to the user's personal account, but only by a small majority. Google began doing both of these in 2016 after previously promising it wouldn't.

5 of 185 comments (clear)

  1. Expect vs. Care by SuperKendall · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I'm sure few people expect what Google actually does, as it would require technical understanding to realize what is possible and what is probable...

    But here's the truly important thing - how many people truly CARE what Google or Facebook is doing?

    People say they don't want to be tracked across Google, but then they keep on using it. People say they don't want Facebook tracking, but they keep on using it as well. They are saying "I would like everything this does today but disable the tracking". That's nice and all but by continuing to use those services even when they know what is going on, they are indicating they really don't care that much at all and are willing to make the tradeoff of privacy for service.

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
    1. Re:Expect vs. Care by flippy · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Excellent question. I believe the answer is that almost NO ONE cares what the companies are doing. If they cared, they'd stop using the services.

    2. Re:Expect vs. Care by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Insightful

      There are some of us that don't use the services, but we're quickly being lumped in with the tin-foil hat crowd because if we're not using the services we must be paranoid nutters or we have something we know we want to hide. It's unfortunate that those seem to be the only two possibilities for most people. The fact is, I've learned not to trust big business with any other aspect of my life, so I'm certainly not going to trust my digital presence in the hands of someone like Facebook or Google. They're one-up on the traditional business model where it's simply about profit above all else. These digital monsters are all about siphoning you for data AND maximizing profit, and they don't even pretend to give a fuck it's an even more morally bankrupt concept that simply trying to find a way to maximize profits.

      And those of us that see it and try to circumvent it are seen as the outliers, the weirdos, the nut jobs.

  2. Two thirds of consumers are stupid by DogDude · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I have one question for people who think I'm crazy when I say I don't use Google/Android: Where do you think Google makes its money?

    --
    I don't respond to AC's.
    1. Re:Two thirds of consumers are stupid by lexman098 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I think you're crazy and I can answer your question.

      Google makes its money from anonymously connecting you with advertisers. They create a very detailed profile on you based on their tracking data. Then they sell advertisements, expecting the buyer to provide blanket information for the kind of person that they're targeting. Google probably then adds some of its own AI on top of the advertisers' expectations to create more ad clicks. Then you go to a random webpage which asks Google which ad to show you. The advertiser pays Google who gives a smaller amount to the website operator.

      Note how Google never has to release any of your information to make money here. I don't think I remember a single article about Google even accidentally leaking private information.