How The Internet Is Spying On You And How To Stay Safe

Data is the new oil, and there is a race to scoop up as much of yours before those pesky regulators and rights organizations get in the way

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Data is the new oil, and there is a race to scoop up as much of yours before those pesky regulators and rights organizations get in the way

As I write this, a popular thread is doing the rounds on social media worldwide giving a list of useful tips for Americans facing police and mob attacks. It describes things like making sure your location tracking is switched off, as well as fingerprint entry into your phone, and advises readers to post screenshots of photos they take instead of the photos themselves, to reduce the data that can be traced to them. Think of it as a security checklist for going outside in 2020, into a world where stores might ask you to remove your pandemic or pollution mask so that facial recognition surveillance cameras can track you.

It feels strange to be reading this in a country far away, where unofficially-compulsory location-tracking apps, biometric data surrendering and surveillance cameras are current or recent sources of national controversy.

In these strange times, one of the many bizarre threats that unites the whole world is something that would have completely baffled creators of public advisories during previous global crises like World Wars⁠—data grabs.

Data is the new oil, and every possible power-hungry entity is on a mission to scoop up as much of yours before those pesky regulators and rights organizations get in the way. By the time we’re allowed to find out how much our personal data is worth, someone else is likely to be in possession of it—and the more technology advances, the faster our privacy erodes.

In developed democracies, most data surrender is by choice. People want to see what famous work of art they resemble, and they feed in their face data. Their browsing patterns, likes, shares, and those of their friends tell corporations exactly what they’re likely to buy and even when. Phones, webcams and smart home devices secretly spy on them, and before they finish sentences, their information has travelled across the world, possibly via space, and been seen by people and software they’ll nev...

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