"Banning us, the small adtech firms, from harvesting and linking data on billions across 1000s of companies without people's knowledge will benefit big tech, so you shouldn't"

"Banning us, the small food producers, from selling toxic food will benefit big food, so you shouldn't"
"Banning us from providing toxic food will kill competition, innovation and small businesses. Big food also provides toxic food, and they can easily afford to comply with regulations or shape them how they see fit or delay the enforcement, while we, the small producers cannot."
"So, the solution is clearly to allow both small and big food provide toxic food."
Consumers, citizens, companies and organizations who provide services or operate business models that do not rely on data exploitation, organic food producers: #wtf?

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More from @WolfieChristl

12 Apr
…without explanation, the investigator changed the priority level on the escalation from "high" to "low"

Essential read on how FB just does not care about the world, because business goals. Breathtaking irresponsibility. Huge creds to the whistleblower.
theguardian.com/technology/202…
FB has control over global debate and social relationships at an unprecedented scale.

It's disastrous that FB only cares if cheap, very visible or otherwise in its self interest. And it's disastrous that FB has this kind of control, without any democratic accountability, at all.
"It’s not for threat intel to investigate fake engagement"

"I don’t think Honduras is big on people’s minds here"

"we prioritize stopping the most urgent and harmful threats globally. Fake likes is not one of them"

"I wish resources were unlimited"
(w $54.86bn in cash on hand)
Read 7 tweets
8 Apr
The large number of breaches shouldn't lead to the conclusion that data protection doesn't matter anymore, quite the contrary.

It shows that making the legitimacy to use personal data dependent on the functioning of technical measures or privacy self-management is totally over.
Of course, orgs must care about security, and they must be liable for not doing so. But there will always be shady actors who will use dirty data for shady purposes.

In any case, we need to make sure that legit entities cannot legally use dirty data without risking everything.
Regulating how entities can legally use/process personal data is basically what the EU data protection regime is about. Enforcing it requires bureaucratic procedures from documenting data processing to audits to general deterrence etc.

Like with dirty money, there are pitfalls.
Read 5 tweets
7 Apr
According to the German Consumer Federation, the EU's #psd2 directive turned bank transaction data into a commodity and created a 'pipeline' for data flows to fintechs and other parties without much oversight.

Statement and report:
vzbv.de/pressemitteilu…
vzbv.de/sites/default/…
While banking regulators are pushing for competition, oversight about data protection and consumer privacy is missing.

The VZBV is thus calling for stricter rules, better enforcement, the #psd2 evaluation should focus on data protection.

Position paper:
vzbv.de/sites/default/…
Specifically, the sphere of licensed #psd2 intermediaries and API providers who may share data with non-licensed parties raises many questions.

They also warn that 'consent' may become an illusion when sharing bank transaction data with e.g. landlords or telcos becomes the norm.
Read 6 tweets
5 Apr
I missed this comprehensive investigation by @kfranasz from Oct 2020 that found that 502 out of 537 websites by US senators and congressional reps (.house.gov/.senate.gov) transmitted personal data on visitors to Google, 309 to Facebook, 69 to Oracle. Bad.
adalytics.io/blog/is-congre…
Actually, no website should send behavioral data to Google, FB or other surveillance marketing companies, including sites by parties and politicians.

Apart from that, formal .gov sites should really not share data with any company that exploits it for commercial purposes at all.
This is even more true for sites by public authorities.

Like the US Customs and Border Protection website that just sent personal data on my visit to FB, Google, Microsoft, The Trade Desk, mdhv.io (?) and other parties during my visit as observed in my browser.
Read 4 tweets
5 Apr
Lobbying spend by 25 companies registered as 'data brokers' in the US, including Oracle, RELX, Experian, Equifax, TransUnion, LiveRamp, Neustar, Venntel, Zeta Global, Aristotle, X-Mode.

By @alfredwkng and @tenuous: themarkup.org/privacy/2021/0…
"The Markup contacted all 25 companies for comment on their lobbying activities. Several companies, like ... LiveRamp denied being data brokers"

Ridiculous.
Why may Deloitte have registered as a data broker?

They calculate health risk scores based on data from clients & data brokers including financial data, purchases, music preferences, high school grades… 🤔
www2.deloitte.com/content/dam/De…
www2.deloitte.com/content/dam/De…
www2.deloitte.com/us/en/legal/pr…
Read 6 tweets
3 Apr
Update, FB received personal data on me from 1573 apps and websites over the last 6 months, up more than two-fold from January 2020 when it introduced its 'Off-Facebook Activity' tool.
Methodology: For a part of my daily web activity I use a browser without any tracking protection or ad blocker, which is also logged into FB. Like many others. Annoying and painful, but what has to be done has to be done.

Correction: The new number seems to cover >6 months.
Some sites sent data about my activities to FB hundreds of times. Media websites are among the worst offenders:

- Daily Mail: 297x
- The Independent: 280x
- The Guardian: 203x
- Vice: 158x
- Reuters: 91x
- The Atlantic: 87x
- Forbes: 72x
- The New Yorker: 53x
- Politico: 46x
Read 27 tweets

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