> I’d like them to fix the problem rather than playing whack-a-mole with banning data sources
We should fix the problem and ban the data-sources. Whack-a-mole makes it sound like we're talking about a ban on one company, but what clearly needs to be done is a categorical ban on super sketchy business practices, and that seems simple enough. Data-brokers, if they are going to exist at all, need to accept the burden of proof to establish that every single row involves consent, and they need to acquire new consent for every single resale of the information. If that makes the whole industry unprofitable, too fucking bad. And if this looks bad for business, it gets even worse: good luck getting consent for reselling what is mine without offering me a cut.
Since the above kind of common sense looks crazy these days, let's throw in something even more radical. For anyone looking to fund UBI, ^ here's a start. The trouble with the often-mentioned idea of "tax the data" as a solution for privacy concerns is that these taxes are just redistributing wealth from corporations to governments, while all of profit is made with our information. Who wants the monetized details of their personal life to pay for the next unjust war, or even the roads in some place they don't live. If we are so valuable, put some of that money back in our hands, and if the price doesn't sound fair to us, then let us opt out of the sale.
We should fix the problem and ban the data-sources. Whack-a-mole makes it sound like we're talking about a ban on one company, but what clearly needs to be done is a categorical ban on super sketchy business practices, and that seems simple enough. Data-brokers, if they are going to exist at all, need to accept the burden of proof to establish that every single row involves consent, and they need to acquire new consent for every single resale of the information. If that makes the whole industry unprofitable, too fucking bad. And if this looks bad for business, it gets even worse: good luck getting consent for reselling what is mine without offering me a cut.
Since the above kind of common sense looks crazy these days, let's throw in something even more radical. For anyone looking to fund UBI, ^ here's a start. The trouble with the often-mentioned idea of "tax the data" as a solution for privacy concerns is that these taxes are just redistributing wealth from corporations to governments, while all of profit is made with our information. Who wants the monetized details of their personal life to pay for the next unjust war, or even the roads in some place they don't live. If we are so valuable, put some of that money back in our hands, and if the price doesn't sound fair to us, then let us opt out of the sale.