An economics, investment, trading and policy blog with a focus on Modern Monetary Theory (MMT). We seek the truth, avoid the mainstream and are virulently anti-neoliberalism.
The cool part, is by seeing what they are collecting, it makes it really easy to NOT be tracked when you don't want to because it's really obvious now what they track and how. Avoiding it would be a snap. If you combine, telco data, with social media, google, banking and tax data... my god you could resurrect someone from the dead.
It's pretty mundane and boring, searches and email indexes are obviously invasive and incriminating of everything I ever typed into a search bar. The only part that bothered me was my picture albums had some dead family and pets that I thought I had lost, actually spent $1,000 fixing a broken phone to get the pictures and all along Google had the photos and more that I had deleted but google kept.
Weird the world we live in where our own personal data at 10s of gigabytes is larger than all the worlds data combined before the 1970s. Wait a few more years...
3 comments:
Let's not forget all the data that your cell service, internet provider, bank, insurance companies, etc. have on you.
And let's not forget that it's all available to the gubment, although for some things they may need a warrant, at least technically.
The cool part, is by seeing what they are collecting, it makes it really easy to NOT be tracked when you don't want to because it's really obvious now what they track and how. Avoiding it would be a snap. If you combine, telco data, with social media, google, banking and tax data... my god you could resurrect someone from the dead.
It's pretty mundane and boring, searches and email indexes are obviously invasive and incriminating of everything I ever typed into a search bar. The only part that bothered me was my picture albums had some dead family and pets that I thought I had lost, actually spent $1,000 fixing a broken phone to get the pictures and all along Google had the photos and more that I had deleted but google kept.
Weird the world we live in where our own personal data at 10s of gigabytes is larger than all the worlds data combined before the 1970s. Wait a few more years...
Post a Comment