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  by Scott Allan Morrison
 February 08, 2016
 
			from
			
			TheDailyBeast Website 
			
			Spanish version
 
 
				
					
						| 
						Scott Allan 
						Morrison was a tech correspondent for the Financial 
						Times and Dow Jones Newswires, as well as a contributor 
						to The Wall Street Journal. His first novel, Terms of 
						Use, was released January 01. |  
			  
			  
			  
			  
			
			 
			  
			  
			Facebook,
			
			Google, and the other Internet 
			titans have ever more sophisticated and intrusive methods of mining 
			your data, and that's just the tip of the iceberg.
 
 The success of the consumer Internet can be attributed to a simple 
			grand bargain.
 
			  
			We've been encouraged to search the Web, 
			share our lives with friends, and take advantage of all sorts of 
			other free services. In exchange, the Internet titans that provide 
			these services, as well as hundreds of other lesser-known firms, 
			have meticulously tracked our every move in order to bombard us with 
			targeted advertising. Now, this grand bargain is being tested by new 
			attitudes and technologies.
 Consumers who were not long ago blithely dismissive of privacy 
			issues are increasingly feeling that they've lost control over their 
			personal information.
 
			  
			Meanwhile, Internet companies, adtech 
			firms, and data brokers continue to roll out new technologies to 
			build ever more granular profiles of hundreds of millions, if not 
			billions, of consumers.  
			  
			And with next generation of artificial 
			intelligence poised to exploit our data in ways we can't even 
			imagine, the simple terms of the old agreement seem woefully 
			inadequate.
 In the early days of the Internet, we were led to believe that all 
			this data would deliver us to a state of information nirvana. We 
			were going to get new tools and better communications, access to all 
			the information we could possibly need, and ads we actually wanted 
			to receive.
 
			  
			Who could possibly argue with that?
 For a while, the predictions seemed to be coming true. But then 
			privacy goalposts were (repeatedly) moved, companies were caught 
			(accidentally) snooping on us, and hackers showed us just how easy 
			it is to steal our personal information.
 
			  
			Advertisers weren't thrilled either, 
			particularly when we adopted mobile phones and tablets. That's 
			because the cookies that track us on our computers don't work very 
			well on mobile devices. And with our online activity split among our 
			various devices, each of us suddenly appeared to be two or three 
			different people.
 This wasn't a bad thing for consumers, because mobile phones emit 
			data that enable companies to learn new things about us, such as 
			where we go, who we meet, places we shop, and other habits that help 
			them recognize and then predict our long-term patterns.
 
 But now, new cross-device technologies are enabling the advertising 
			industry to combine all our information streams into a single 
			comprehensive profile by linking each of us to our desktop, mobile 
			phone, and iPad.
 
			  
			Throw in wearable devices like a Fitbit, 
			connected TVs, and the Internet of Things, and the concept of 
			cross-device tracking expands to potentially include anything that 
			gives off a signal.
 The ad industry is drooling over this technology because it can 
			follow and target us as we move through our daily routines, whether 
			we are searching on our desktop, surfing on our iPad, or out on the 
			town with our phone in hand.
 
 There are two methods to track people across devices. The more 
			precise technique is deterministic tracking, which links devices to 
			a single user when that person logs into the same site from a 
			desktop computer, phone, and tablet.
 
			  
			This is the approach used by Internet 
			giants like, 
				
					
					
					Facebook
					
					Twitter
					
					Google
					
					Apple,  
			...all of which have enormous user bases 
			that log into their mobile and desktop properties.
 A quick glance at Facebook's data privacy policy shows it records 
			just about everything we do, including the content we provide, who 
			we communicate with, what we look at on its pages, as well as 
			information about us that our friends provide.
   
			Facebook saves payment information, 
			details about the devices we use, location info, and connection 
			details.    
			The social network also knows when we 
			visit third-party sites that use its services (such as the Like 
			button, Facebook Log In, or the company's measurement and 
			advertising services).    
			It also collects information about us 
			from its partners.
 Most of the tech giants have similar policies and they all emphasize 
			that they do not share personally identifiable information with 
			third parties.
 
				
					
					
					
					
					Facebook, for example, uses 
					our data to deliver ads within its walled garden but says it 
					does not let outsiders export our information.   
					
					
					
					Google
					says it only shares aggregated sets of anonymized 
					data. 
			Little-known companies - primarily 
			advertising networks and adtech firms like Tapad and Drawbridge - 
			are also watching us.    
			We will never log into their websites, 
			so they use probabilistic tracking techniques to link us to our 
			devices. They start by embedding digital tags or pixels into the 
			millions of websites we visit so they can identify our devices, 
			monitor our browsing habits, look for time-based patterns, as well 
			as other metrics.    
			By churning massive amounts of this data 
			through statistical models, tracking companies can discern patterns 
			and make predictions about who is using which device. Proponents 
			claim they are accurate more than 90 percent of the time, but 
			none of this is visible to us and is thus very difficult to 
			control.
 In recent comments to the Federal Trade Commission, the Center for 
			Democracy and Technology illustrated just how invasive cross-device 
			tracking technology could be.
   
			Suppose a user searched for sexually 
			transmitted disease (STD) symptoms on her personal computer, 
			used a phone to look up directions to a Planned Parenthood clinic, 
			visited a pharmacy, and then returned home.    
			With this kind of cross-device tracking, 
			it would be easy to infer that the user was treated for an STD.
 That's creepy enough, but consider this:
 
				
				by using the GPS or Wi-Fi information 
				generated by the patient's mobile phone, it would not be 
				difficult to discover her address. And by merging her online 
				profile with offline information from a third-party data broker, 
				it would be fairly simple to identify the patient. 
			So, should we be concerned that 
			companies use cross-device tracking to compile more comprehensive 
			profiles of us?    
			Let us count the reasons:   
				
					
					
					Your data could be hacked:    
					Privacy Rights Clearinghouse 
					reports that in 2015 alone, hackers gained access to the 
					records of, 
						
							
							
							4.5 million patients at 
							UCLA Health System
							
							37 million clients of 
							online cheating website Ashley Madison
							
							15 million Experian 
							accounts
							
							80 million Anthem 
							customers
							
							more than 21 million 
							individuals in the federal Office of Personnel 
							Management's security clearance database 
					And these were just the 
					headliners that garnered media attention.    
					No site or network is entirely 
					safe, and numerous researchers have already demonstrated how 
					incredibly easy it is to "reidentify" or "deanonymize" 
					individuals hidden in anonymized data.
 
					
					Your profile could be sold:    
					In fact, it typically is, in 
					anonymized fashion. That's the whole point.    
					But in many cases, Internet 
					companies' privacy policies also make it clear our profiles 
					are assets to be bought and sold should the company change 
					ownership.    
					This was the case when Verizon 
					bought AOL and merged their advertising efforts, creating 
					much more detailed profiles of their combined user base.
					   
					Yahoo might be next should it 
					decide to spin off its Internet properties.
 
					
					Your data could be used in ways you did 
					not anticipate:    
					Google, Facebook, and other 
					companies create customized Web experiences based on our 
					interests, behavior, and even our social circles. 
					   
					On one level, this makes perfect 
					sense because none of us want to scroll through reams of 
					irrelevant search results, news stories, or social media 
					updates.    
					But researchers have 
					demonstrated that our online profiles also have real-world 
					consequences, including the prices we pay for products, the 
					amount of credit extended to us, and even the job offers we 
					may receive. 
			Our data is already used to build and 
			test advanced analytics models for new services and features. There 
			is much more to come.    
			The Googles and the Facebooks of the 
			Internet boast that newly emerging artificial intelligence will 
			enable them to analyze greater amounts of our data to discern new 
			behavioral patterns and to predict what we will think and want 
			before we actually think and want it.    
			These companies have only begun to 
			scratch the surface of what is possible with our data. We are being 
			profiled in incredible and increasingly detailed ways, and our data 
			may be exploited for purposes we cannot yet possibly understand.
			   
			The old bargain - 'free' Internet 
			services in exchange for targeted advertising - is rapidly become a 
			quaint relic of the past.    
			And with no sense of how, when, or why 
			our data might be used in the future, it is not clear what might 
			take its place.
 
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