Smartphones are well named. They’re smart.
They know where you go, what you buy, what you are looking for and even when
you go to bed.
Trouble is, smartphones aren’t discreet.
They don’t keep all your information to themselves. They share it with all
sorts of apps that you download to your phone.
Companies that track you online – Google and
Facebook prime amongst them – are now tracking you off line as well as on. It
used to be that they had to tell you about cookies, but now they can track you
through your device and you don’t even know. Worried that the Government has
too much information about you? Well, perhaps it’s time you thought about how
much commercial companies hold. They don’t do it for “national security”, they only
do it because they want to make more money out of you - by selling your data to better target ads
to get you spend more.
A leading company in the new tracking
business is called Drawbridge (http://www.drawbrid.ge/). They have a ticker
counter on their homepage that computes the number of devices that have now
been “bridged” for “precision audience targeting”. So far it’s over 922 million…
Founded by a former Google data scientist, Drawbridge can determine that a
cellphone, work computer, home computer and tablet belong to the same person,
even if the devices are in no way connected.
Feeling slightly concerned? You should be.
Other comparable companies include Flurry, Velti and Session M… Never heard of
them either? Hmmm. And what about your wireless carrier, I hear you ask…want to
know what they are doing with your info? Well, Verizon is now asking customers
to “opt in” to share information with advertisers and AT&T is planning on
starting selling customer data to marketers.
So the next debate you have about Governments
and privacy, perhaps you should broaden the discussion… Do you really trust a
multi-national who is focused only on the bottom line and its share price to do
what even your Government didn’t – that is to say, protect your privacy and
stay out of your personal space?
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