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6 votes
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Microsoft re-releases Windows 10 October 2018 update with explanation of data loss bug
23 votes -
Facebook Isn’t Sorry — It Just Wants Your Data
15 votes -
Data for good: Wonderful ways that big data is making the world better
7 votes -
Alphabet to shut Google+ social site after user data exposed
18 votes -
Did Facebook learn anything from the Cambridge Analytica debacle? An even bigger data breach suggests it didn’t.
14 votes -
What does big data look like when cross-referenced?
Google knows a lot about its users. Facebook knows a lot about its users. FitBit knows a lot about its users. And so on. But what happens when these companies all sell their data sets to one...
Google knows a lot about its users. Facebook knows a lot about its users. FitBit knows a lot about its users. And so on.
But what happens when these companies all sell their data sets to one another? It'd be pretty trivial to link even anonymized users from set to set by looking for specific features. If I went for a run, Google tracked my location, FitBit tracked my heart rate, and Facebook tracked my status about my new best mile time, for example. Thus, Google can narrow down who I am in the other sets using pre-existing information that coincides with theirs. With enough overlap they can figure out exactly who I am fairly easily. Furthermore, each additional layer of data makes this discovery process from new data sets even easier, as it gives more opportunities to confirm or rule out concurrent info. So then when, say, Credit Karma, Comcast, and Amazon's data enter the fray, my online identity stops looking like an individual egg in each different basket but a whole lot of eggs in all in one. And they can do this across millions/billions of users--not just me!
I don't know for certain that this is a thing that happens, but... I have to assume it definitely is happening, right? How could it not? With how valuable data is and how loose protections are, this seems like a logical and potentially very lucrative step.
Right now, is there an aggregate version of "me" that exists in a data store somewhere that is a more comprehensive and accurate picture than my own self-image? After all, my memory and perception are imperfect and biased, but data stores aren't.
6 votes -
Data Factories
6 votes -
No cash needed at this cafe. Students pay the tab with their personal data.
31 votes -
The Opportunity Atlas
5 votes -
iPhone iOS passcode bypass hack exposes contacts, photos
8 votes -
China's Social Credit system: The first modern digital dictatorship
8 votes -
Introduce a Stats page?
Would love to see different live data on things like user counts, post/comment frequency, etc
12 votes -
Introducing Firefox Monitor, helping people take control after a data breach
24 votes -
NCIX data breach - The WAN Show Sept 21, 2018
7 votes -
A life insurance company wants to track your fitness data
10 votes -
NCIX Data Breach - after bankruptcy, terabytes of unencrypted customer/company data have been sold to multiple buyers
20 votes -
How Game Apps That Captivate Kids Have Been Collecting Their Data
11 votes -
A call for principle-based international agreements to govern law enforcement access to data
7 votes -
A year later, Equifax lost your data but faced little fallout
17 votes -
Who controls your data? Nine reporters in London, Paris, New York & San Francisco filed more than 150 requests for personal data to 30+ popular tech companies
8 votes -
Fitbit's 150 billion hours of heart data reveal secrets about health
11 votes -
Should Grindr users worry about what China will do with their data?
16 votes -
Google and Mastercard cut a secret ad deal to track retail sales
26 votes -
How do you back up your data?
...you do back up your data, don't you?
36 votes -
The tech industry is lobbying for federal data & privacy regulation that is friendly to the tech industry, but hostile to users' interests
11 votes -
Venmo's public API exposes millions of transactions, startling users
10 votes -
Verizon throttled fire department’s “unlimited” data during California wildfire
17 votes -
California wildfires: Verizon throttled data during crisis
24 votes -
The Data Detox Kit- An 8 day challenge to clean up your online data.
16 votes -
Health effects of overweight and obesity in 195 countries over twenty-five years
4 votes -
CCleaner provokes fury over Active Monitoring, user data collection
28 votes -
Facebook in talks with banks to add your financial information to Messenger
18 votes -
538 shares largest dataset of Russian troll tweets, compiled by two professors at Clemson University
17 votes -
Training frequency for strength development: What the data say
4 votes -
The tragedy of the data commons
3 votes -
Google, Facebook, Microsoft, and Twitter partner for ambitious new data project
7 votes -
Here's what fifty years of food supply data says about Canada's eating habits
9 votes -
On the future computer era modification of the American character and the role of the engineer, or, a little caution in the haste to number (1968)
7 votes -
Health insurers are vacuuming up details about you — and it could raise your rates
10 votes -
Breach 'inevitable' in digital health records
7 votes -
What if people were paid for their data?
14 votes -
Judge orders Health Canada to release 'confidential' pharmaceutical data
8 votes -
Mitsubishi wants your driving data, and it's willing to throw in a free cup of coffee to get it
7 votes -
Tens of thousands of Australians who have given DNA samples to sites such as Ancestry.com could have their genetic data examined by police without their knowledge
12 votes -
Typeform data breach hits thousands of survey accounts
8 votes -
Penalty shoot-outs are basically still crap-shoots
7 votes -
Facebook chats from planning session of Unite The Right 2 have been leaked
17 votes -
‘Everyone is breaking the law right now’: GDPR compliance efforts are falling short
19 votes -
Migrants and refugees are good for economies: Analysis of thirty years of data from Western Europe refutes suggestions that asylum seekers pose a financial burden
6 votes