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Picture this:

  1. You type on Google “laptop won’t turn on”
  2. Google now knows you have a broken laptop and can estimate how desperate you are to fix it.
  3. Because it knows how desperate you are, it can increase shop prices proportionally.

You are going to pay the maximum they get you to pay.

That’s algorithmic pricing.

The more companies know about you, the more they can predict and sell how desperate you are to other stores out there.

An internet-connected car knows much more about you than you realize. A smart TV also knows what you like. Your Alexa knows if there is a problem in the home.

Privacy is much more than just sensitive data.

It’s about not giving leverage away.

Because algorithms will use it against you.

Be safe out there.

Nostr.

  • Miles O'Brien
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    2152 months ago

    Here’s the one that convinced my dad that connecting everything is bad:

    Your smart fridge knows what’s inside and knows you just added a 12 pack of soda and donuts to the shopping list. They sell that data to a bunch of companies, including your insurance company. They know you have diabetes.

    Your insurance rates just went up for the fifth time this year because your insurance company knows what you’re eating.

    And it’s a good thing you don’t drink beer or your car insurance would have gone up ‘due to increased risk factors.’ too bad you wanted to buy a new car this year.

    Not only can you not afford it now, the price went up because they know you want a car. I’m sure they would make a payment deal with you though.

    And every company will know all about the deal, the beer, the donuts, and all it took was sending money to whatever company had the information, and they were more than happy to sell it.

    The more we allow companies to freely operate like this without regulation and without proper punishment for breaking the rules, we will continue sliding toward the hellscape of Ferenginar. For the non trekkies, it’s a hyper-capitalist species of profit-driven assholes.

    • @pufferfisherpowder
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      1372 months ago

      The best thing is these companies will say it’s not violation of your privacy because they sell the data without a direct link to your name or address. But guess what? They bundle it with all kinds of other identifiers like age, sex, weight, approximate location, whatever else you give them. The insurance company then takes that and modifies the category that is specifically this age bracket, approximate location, weight, age, beer and donuts in the fridge. And surprise! You fit all these “anonymous” identifiers.
      But no harm done, your identity is safe 👍

        • @rtxn
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          532 months ago

          That’s the whole thing about browser fingerprinting too. Take the set of internet users who have a particular version of a particular operating system, a particular version of a particular browser, having a particular set of typefaces installed, having a particular language preference, and you’ll find yourself in the intersection of all of them.

          • Trailblazing Braille Taser
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            352 months ago

            Remember, kids, it only takes 32 bits to uniquely identify any person on the planet. That’s 32 yes or no questions. Of course, they have to be perfectly crafted questions, but identifying power of fingerprinting must not be underestimated.

            • @rtxn
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              352 months ago

              Clearly we all need to upgrade our personalities to a new 64-bit architecture.

            • @mkwt
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              122 months ago

              Actually I think the world population is such that you need to add one or two bits.

          • @[email protected]
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            2 months ago

            To add to this.

            Here’s a website to help you check your own trackability:

            https://coveryourtracks.eff.org

            It can also help give you advice on how to improve your privacy.

            Things that help: (tldr use adblockers but otherwise it’s really about blending into the crowd)

            • using a browser that respects privacy (e.g. not Chrome)
            • using a “popular” browser (using something weird can help narrow it down to you because not many people are using that)
            • (Firefox is a good browser choice. Safari is fine, Edge is probably ok. Avoid Chrome).
            • using an ad blocker
            • using a VPN can sometimes help but can also sometimes hurt because, again, it helps narrow you down.
            • using a popular device can make it harder to track

            Hard to track: uses Firefox with uBlock origin. Maybe using a popular VPN. Uses an iPhone or a popular model of Android like the Pixel (although Google owning Android/Pixel might mean they get your data anyway…)

            Actually very easy to track: uses a niche Chromium-based browser you got from GitHub with niche GitHub project as blockers and a little/known VPN. Uses a niche brand of smartphone with a niche non-Android based OS on it.

            • @GoofSchmoofer
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              22 months ago

              That was interesting.

              Is there an add-on that changes the header information from an HTTP request to show bogus but common identifying information?

              That is crowdsource the most common configurations and set that as the default in the add-on, so now you look like just another face in the crowd.

              • @[email protected]
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                42 months ago

                It’s more than just the header information. The graphics and audio checksum can give away details of what your device is, even if those details don’t match what header information you are sending. That mismatch is itself information they can use.

            • @[email protected]
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              12 months ago

              Brave is the only browser I can actually get a decent score with, too bad it has crypto brainrot

        • @[email protected]
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          22 months ago

          Names actually have a really high collision rate, so for collecting information they’re not good. You don’t want all the different John Smiths’ data clumped together. They’re useful once you start sending personalized stuff in though.

      • @[email protected]
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        32 months ago

        Well said and a core concept people need to understand to appreciate data privacy/sovereignty. Simply calling it data overlooks what it often is: your behavior over time. We don’t call it PII but few things are more personally identifying.

    • @[email protected]
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      322 months ago

      when google gave away those google assistant spheres some years ago for free, i ordered one just to have one less of those fucking things out in the world. it went straight in the trash

    • @Tikiporch
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      192 months ago

      I hope you also advised to only use cash. When you use a credit card, not only does Kroger or Walmart know your dietary habits, but many merchants share level 2 transaction data with your credit card company, so they know individual items in your receipt as well.

      • @[email protected]
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        2 months ago

        And if you enroll in those “apples/samsung/etc” pay services on your phone, those services also gain access to your purchase history, even if you never use the service.

      • @[email protected]
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        62 months ago

        I was surprised by a recent, popular comment here on lemmy where someone advised against using cash because of missing out on rewards. A majority of people don’t appreciate the tradeoffs here. By default, banks and private companies have more info on us than we have on ourselves. To think that they’re going to do anything that benefits us more than them is naive. While not everything is zero sum, we are talking about extractive, profit seeking industries.

        Cash seems like the best defense on this front. I recent switched back to cash, and continue to track my own finances; Bank sees $500 withdrawal; I see $34.45 at grocery store, $19.20 at hardware store, etc.

        Pro tip: try random but memorable phone numbers at checkout. Now you can enjoy the savings, and salt/contaminate the data extraction of others. The more randomness (where and when you shop, what you buy, which numbers you use) the better.

        • @Tikiporch
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          42 months ago

          That’s a great tip to use someone else’s phone number! I use my mother-in-law’s phone number. I will never convince her not to use these reward programs, so may as well pile them on.

    • @[email protected]
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      142 months ago

      And the health apps know when you’re sleeping, they know your heartrate throughout the day, your o2 sats. They can take all this mortality risk data to factor in things, advertise drugs to you, advertise foods they know you’ll eat even though it’s bad, manipulate how your insurance pays out for your next treatment because it would have been preventable if you hadn’t eaten those donuts. The phone manufacturers know you run apps, how long, what you do (yes, even Apple, especially Apple, they hide behind “privacy” so you feel ok with what they do to you) what web pages you open, how long you view them.

      They could biometrically paint a picture of your day, your movement, there’s an entire profile of data available on many humans. I wouldn’t be surprised if they aren’t already tying heart rate data to viewership of media and advertising.

    • @[email protected]
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      -122 months ago

      This only sounds bad for people with a love of beer and donuts.

      Admittedly, I am included within that group. But if I wasn’t, I could see supporting such variable rates.

      • @[email protected]
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        52 months ago

        People can’t keep sacrificing what they like just to survive. There’s no point if you don’t get to live

      • @GraniteM
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        52 months ago

        First they came for the beer and soda drinkers, and I did not speak out—because I did not drink beer and soda.