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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Wednesday, April 5, 2017
Internet Privacy 2017 | What You Need to Know
There has never been a reasonable expectation of online privacy, and there never will be.
(NEW YORK, New York) - Regardless of what you may have recently heard
about joint resolutions or nullifications, nothing has changed. Internet
Service Providers (ISPs) have always had the right to use your data as
they see fit, within a few Federal Trade Commission (FTC) and Federal
Communications Commission (FCC) parameters. This has not changed.
And you have given FANG (Facebook, Amazon, Netflix, and Google) the
right to use your data as they see fit (with a few privacy policy
exceptions and within the few aforementioned FTC and FCC parameters). So
regarding online privacy, for all practical purposes, absolutely
nothing has changed.
What About S.J.Res.34?
Update: On April 3, 2017, the president signed S.J.Res.34, a joint resolution that nullified the FCC’s “Protecting the Privacy of Customers of Broadband and Other Telecommunications Services” rule. But the FCC rule never went into effect. So net/net, nothing has changed.
What Does This Mean?
One side will tell you that the FCC rule was overly burdensome for ISPs
because they would have had to obtain opt-in permission from each
customer to use the customers’ data.
The other side will tell you that the FCC rule was absolutely necessary
because ISPs have access to 100 percent of your online activity while
FANG can only see what you do on their respective sites.
Most of the explanations from elected leaders failed to mention that you
pay hard currency to your ISP for access to the Internet. Therefore,
you would expect some privacy options (even if those options were
offered at a premium price).
On the other hand, you pay for Facebook and Google with your data, so as
the cliché goes, “YOU are the product,” and you should not have any
expectation of privacy (other than what’s written in the user license
agreement or Privacy Policy of the respective sites).
As for Amazon and Netflix, you pay with both cash and data. But you can
rest easy. Both Amazon and Netflix only use your data internally. While
they offer insights to certain vendors, sponsors, and suppliers, the
amount of actual data they make available to 2nd or 3rd parties is
negligible.
Short Term
In the short term, all of this is meaningless. ISPs don’t make money
selling your data (although they could), and most of them do not yet
have an effective way to sell advertising. They make money by charging
you for Internet access. FANG literally lives on your data. Without it,
FANG would be severely disabled. But you already grant them the rights,
so nothing has changed.
Long Term
Long term, things will change. There are many probable futures. One of
them is not the passage of the previously proposed privacy rules by the
FCC. What has changed is the method we will use to draft and legislate
privacy policy. It is a non-trivial matter and is, and will continue to
be, a topic which inspires vigorous debate.
In a data-deregulated environment, ISPs are free to develop all kinds of
new capabilities as the technologies become practical. We might see
“intelligence layers” between us and the networks.
Hypothetically, this type of AI would know where you are, where you are
likely to be, what you like to do, when you like to do it, etc. In
practice, it would be used to sell you stuff.
It could also be useful for autonomous vehicles and IoT applications.
But, as with all things, there’s a dark side. Thinking about potential
abuses of this type of data-driven AI should give one pause.
Should We Have Internet Privacy Laws?
Should we have Internet privacy laws? What should we protect? Are
privacy laws antithetical to a free and open Internet? Or would a
well-reasoned set of privacy rules provide a level playing field and
fertile ground for commerce and communication?
Under this administration, it looks like whatever laws are in place will
remain in place. Whatever proposals can be nullified seem to be fair
game. For those who supported the previous administration’s worldview,
it’s time for a new strategy.
It’s a Bigger Topic – What You Can Do
There’s more at stake than online privacy. The concepts of Net
Neutrality and a free and open Internet and a set of reasonable rules
that promote investments and reward investors are not mutually
exclusive.
We should strive for consensus. Regardless of your personal preferences,
you should contact your elected officials and let them know your
thoughts.
When discussing online privacy, remember the Internet not only
transports your smartphone and web browser data, it also transports your
banking data (from bank to bank), your health records (from doctor to
hospital), autonomous vehicle data, Internet of Things data, municipal
sensor data (such as water meters and weather data), and every other
type of data that we create by interacting in a completely digital
world.
VPNs & Encrypted Email
Since the joint resolution passed, I’ve had a remarkable number of
questions about Virtual Private Networks (VPNs) and email encryption, as
if suddenly there’s a new need for these services. (BTW: We’ll discuss
online privacy vs. online security in another article. They are not the
same thing.)
If you didn’t need a VPN or encrypted email yesterday, you probably
don’t need it today. That said, I only access the Internet through VPNs,
and I encrypt communication that I would not like to see on WikiLeaks.
I do not endorse any of the following products, but I pay for and use
some of them. They all work as well as consumer-grade systems can work.
If you feel like you will be safer using a VPN or encrypted email,
here’s a short list of options:
VPNs
- NordVPN
- Cloak
- VPN Unlimited
Encrypted Email
- ProtonMail
- Virtru
- What We Really Need
What We Really Need
Data is a very valuable asset. How valuable? Have a look at the combined
market cap of FANG. They, and most online businesses, transform the
value of our data into their wealth. Which raises the question, should
they own the data we create, or should we?
If we create it, shouldn’t it be ours? I can argue both sides. Perhaps you can too. Let’s start the discussion immediately!
Previously published: ShellyPalmer.com