For the last couple months, digital data collection has been making national headlines almost daily. From the Amazon Echoβs random laughter to the Cambridge Analytica scandal that caught Facebook users off guard, the same questions continue to come up: How and what information is being gathered about me, and whoβs using it for what purpose?
From smart home devices to social media accounts, there are countless ways our data is being collected and used every day. ΒιΆΉ·¬ΊΕ Detroit spoke with the Executive in Residence at TechTown Detroit, Gerry Rosten, to find out what data mining is and how we can protect our information.
ΒιΆΉ·¬ΊΕ Detroit: What are the drawbacks of having a smart device in your house?
Gerry Rosten: I think the issue is that these companies are building up profiles of who we are. They use that; thatβs how they make money. For a company like Google, we are not their customer; we are their product. Part of the problem is that thereβs really no limitation with what they can do with the information that they learn about us. Now a lot of what they sell it for is for advertising [because] advertising is becoming theoretically more personalized and targeted but itβs also becoming more ubiquitous. Theyβre getting so much stuff of value from you β; all of your likes, dislikes, what they hear, so thereβs the privacy concern.
Is deleting your Facebook really doing anything to protect your data?
Rosten: The short answer is no. The longer is [if] you delete your data, the amount of new data they get about you will be diminished. Facebook uses these things called tracking cookies to follow what you do online even if youβre not on the Facebook site. And if you delete your Facebook account, my guess is they can probably still gather data because even though youβve deleted your account they still know who you are.Μύ In terms of trying to protect your data, people always poke fun at me, but I use Firefox as my primary browser and I have three plugins designed specifically to block ads and cookies and things like that.
How can data collection be regulated?
Rosten: I think the first step is awareness β just letting people know whatβs being acquired when and where. I think that if most people knew what Facebook was gathering from them on their phones they would be horrified. If you keep your GPS on, Iβm willing to suspect that Facebookβs tracking your movements. So, I would say the first step would be disclosure. The second step is allowing people to delete information from that record because if you think about it, these companies are holding information about you which you probably feel is yours but give you no ability to control it.
So, this is a disclosure issue?
Rosten: Becoming a good computer programmer takes a lot of hard work, and if you are in undergraduate school studying computer science, there is an awful lot of material you have to learn in those four years to be good and confident. β¦ The area where weβre falling down, especially in todayβs world, [is] the people developing these systems have to have an understanding of what they mean. They need to be able to say to their manager this is not morally correct but thereβs so much that they would have to learn to become confident in their primary field that theyβre not taking the humanities courses or the ethics courses or things like that to help them understand not how to do it but why they should do it and we need to get back to that.
Are we willing to deal with this just for ease-of-use?
Rosten: Thatβs exactly what it is.ΜύBe aware and actively make choices. If you use Firefox or Chrome, you have the ability to install plugins which will help with privacy. I installed a new plugin recently called Cookie AutoDelete. With Cookie AutoDelete, as soon as I navigate away from a page, any cookies that I created go away. Now, most of the time thatβs desirable behavior. β¦ The reason you might not want to delete cookies is if youβre using your browser, letβs say you [went] to Amazon, you go back to Amazon and you donβt have to log-in again, itβs because those cookies are still there. How much do I want to leave behind versus how much convenience do I want?
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