Privacy Isn't a Right

http://www.slate.com/articles/technology/future_tense/2013/11/reputation_economics_privacy_isn_t_a_right_it_s_a_commodity.single.html





It's a commodity. Here's how to profit from it.

By Josh Klein



Privacy isn't your right anymore. We sold it for pictures of cats and the

ability to tell anyone in the free world what we had for breakfast.



I'm not saying it was a bad trade, either. The Internet as we know it came

about through the monetization of metadata-information about us-instead of

by replicating traditional models of content sales. As a result the Internet

exploded into a plethora of useful services and platforms of every shape,

size, and description. What's more, it was a great leveler-nobody had more

valuable personal information than anybody else, so everyone was able to

trade it in for the same kinds of services.



The problem with all this is that "privacy" as a notion was abdicated the

instant you clicked "agree" to the online services agreement you didn't

read. And yet most consumers haven't yet realized that their date has left

the restaurant and they're stuck with the bill.



Part of the reason for that is that Big Data has finally begun to produce

some very real, tractable, monetizable techniques. As an example, see a

couple of patents Microsoft filed several years ago. Roughly described, the

first one allows the company to put a number on any identity's ability to

influence others around a particular word or topic. So for the word cheese,

you might have a high score of 88 because you run a popular cheese blog,

whereas I might be lactose intolerant and only have a score of 17. The

second patent is more interesting: It allows Microsoft to dynamically price

a good or service based on your score.



If companies won't start offering genuine value for your data, then you

should consider holding it back.



This means that if you go online to buy some cheese, Microsoft can ask Kraft

if it wants to give you a big discount in the hopes that you'll say

something nice about its cheese and thus drive up sales. Conversely, if I go

to buy some cheese, it can ask Kraft if it wants to jack up the price to the

point where I'm unlikely to buy it, to save the embarrassment of a

potentially bad review. Is that wrong? Is it a violation of privacy?

Materially, it no longer matters. We clicked "agree" and now they legally

can-and by doing so make a whole lot more money.



This emphasis on our data and its uses as a marketing tool has grown so fast

and so far that competitors to the traditional credit card companies are now

starting to drive down their collective margins by consistently underbidding

one another. Square (a company whose dongle plugs into your phone and lets

you accept credit card payments), Simple (an online-only bank), and others

are happy to charge less of a percentage of each transaction because they

know they'll be able to make up the lost profit through resale of the

metadata they've collected-the "who bought what from whom, where, and when."

It's not by accident that they emphasize the use of mobile phones (which

have built-in GPS) for facilitating their transactions and Web browsers

(which connect to all your other online identities) for managing related

funds.



At least these "insights" are happening in a restricted online space, you

might think. After all, I can certainly choose not to spend my time looking

at ads on Facebook. But you'd be mistaken. Many stores use infrared cameras

to determine what products you look at and for how long before you buy. Cell

service providers have started reselling information about what data you

access on your phone at which physical location. For example, Telefonica,

one of Europe's largest cellphone providers, recently released a product

called Smart Steps that would tell retailers who entered their stores and

when, allowing them to tailor products, promotions, and staffing.



On the face of it, a lot of this can, as with online advertising, be chalked

up to companies simply wanting to be better able to give us what we want.

After all, most people don't complain about getting useful search results

from Google or helpful product suggestions from Amazon. But it may not be in

our best interest to be sold as much as we can buy at the highest price we

can afford.

131106_FUT_ReputationEconomics



Courtesy Palgrave Macmillan



That leaves us with limited options. We've already decided that privacy is

not a right-and we affirm that every day that we use Facebook and Google and

all the other services for which we've clicked "agree." We can opt out

entirely, which is increasingly only possible if we want to wrap our heads

in tin foil and live in a cave. Or we can throw up our hands and take what

we're given, which is the most popular choice.



But a better option might be to simply raise our prices. We can limit how

our personal information is gathered and utilized, and in doing so we can

demand that it be purchased at higher rates than just access to Instagram.

It may not mean cold hard cash (at least not at first), but we can certainly

expect more premium services, more discreet advertising, or even just better

control over who gets our data and for what purposes.



After all, once we start controlling what we share with whom, we can decide

that certain kinds of information are worth more to which retailers. Want to

know what sort of food I regularly order? I might decide to share that with

FreshDirect (a grocery delivery service) and Seamless (a restaurant delivery

service), but not with Good Eggs or GrubHub (their competitors). Once those

services recognize that I've got a commodity they want-namely data that

allows them to upsell, cross-market, and target-promote-and that I'm willing

to withhold that information from one provider in favor of another, it

changes the game substantially. In exchange for my precious data, companies

might offer me meaningful dollar-value promotions, discounts, and special

offers.



And if companies won't start offering genuine value for your data, then you

should consider holding it back. Most of the tracking systems that exist

online can still be circumvented or blocked: There are virtual private

networks (VPNs) to prevent our location from being tracked, browser plug-ins

to keep our Web page views private, encryption tools to keep our documents

and emails from being scanned, and anonymizing software to allow us to

participate in social networks without our real-world identities being

connected to our online conversations. As an added bonus, many of these

technologies (such as TOR for anonymizing our Internet traffic or PGP for

encrypting our email) can also protect our data from government

surveillance, both national and international.



Attending to these options is a hassle. They're not designed to give you a

convenient, seamless user experience. But as the value of our personal

information begins to rise, it puts us in a position to name a price for it.

By making such choices we're insisting that our personal information be

valued at what we think is a more accurate market price than "almost

nothing."



>From Reputation Economics by Josh Klein. Copyright C 2013



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