• aprnu@feddit.ch
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    8 months ago

    No place to hide:

    Further, the FTC alleged that there are no real ways for consumers to opt out of Kochava’s data marketplace, because even resetting their mobile advertising IDs—the data point that’s allegedly most commonly used to identify users in its database—won’t stop Kochava customers from using its products to determine "other points to connect to and securely solve for identity.”

  • RickRussell_CA@lemmy.world
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    8 months ago

    Stupendium’s The Data Stream is more applicable every day.

    Name, age, qualifications

    Race, faith, career aspirations

    Political leaning, daily commute

    Marital status, favourite fruit

    Family, browser, medical history

    Hobbies, interests, brand affinity

    Fashion, style, your occupation

    Gender identity, orientation

    Lifestyle choices, dietary needs

    The marketing contact you choose to receive

    Posts, likes, employers, friends

    Social bias, exploitable trends

    Tastes, culture, phone of choice

    Facial structure, the tone of your voice

    If it’s inside your head, we know

    You can’t escape the ebb and flow

    • hagelslager@feddit.nl
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      8 months ago

      In a similar vein: check out their “The Fine Print”, which tackles corporate overreach through the game “The Outer Worlds”.

  • AutoTL;DR@lemmings.worldB
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    8 months ago

    This is the best summary I could come up with:


    US District Judge B. Lynn Winmill recently unsealed a court filing, an amended complaint that perhaps contains the most evidence yet gathered by the FTC in its long-standing mission to crack down on data brokers allegedly “substantially” harming consumers by invading their privacy.

    According to the FTC, Kochava’s customers, ostensibly advertisers, can access this data to trace individuals’ movements—including to sensitive locations like hospitals, temporary shelters, and places of worship, with a promised accuracy within “a few meters”—over a day, a week, a month, or a year.

    Beyond that, the FTC alleged that Kochava also makes it easy for advertisers to target customers by categories that are “often based on specific sensitive and personal characteristics or attributes identified from its massive collection of data about individual consumers.”

    These “audience segments” allegedly allow advertisers to conduct invasive targeting by grouping people not just by common data points like age or gender, but by “places they have visited,” political associations, or even their current circumstances, like whether they’re expectant parents.

    Instead, Kochava “actively promotes its data as a means to evade consumers’ privacy choices,” the FTC alleged.

    Further, the FTC alleged that there are no real ways for consumers to opt out of Kochava’s data marketplace, because even resetting their mobile advertising IDs—the data point that’s allegedly most commonly used to identify users in its database—won’t stop Kochava customers from using its products to determine "other points to connect to and securely solve for identity.”


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