Amazon Österreich sucht für das Logistikzentrum in Großebersdorf Bereichsleiter "mit militärischem Hintergrund".
Die sollen Beschäftigte "führen" und "motivieren" und als "rechte Hand des Standortleiters" Leistung sowie "Auffälligkeiten" überwachen 😬 amazon.jobs/en-gb/jobs/155…
Irgendwie bezeichnend.
Und passt zu den Berichten aus 2019:
"Überwachung, Disziplinierung, entwürdigende Vorschriften: Im Verteilzentrum in Niederösterreich weht laut einem Mitarbeiter ein rauer Wind" derstandard.at/story/20001047…
Auch für deutsche Logistikzentren sucht Amazon jede Menge 'Area Manager' mit militärischem Hintergrund: amazon.jobs/en-gb/search?b…
"Working in an Amazon warehouse is like prison, according to an author who went undercover at a fulfilment centre" insider.com/amazon-warehou…
Polizeiliche und militärische Logiken finden sich bei Amazon wohl auf allen Ebenen, bis hinauf zur Abteilung für "Global Security Operations":
The German Research Foundation @dfg_public, who manages billions of research grants, published a paper on how data analytics, data harvesting and the reuse/resale of user data has become a relevant part of the business model of major academic publishers: dfg.de/download/pdf/f…
The paper raises concerns about the integration of risk surveillance tech by ThreatMetrix/LexisNexis/RELX and third-party tracking by Google, FB, Oracle, Salesforce, Adobe, Neustar et al on academic publishers' platforms, as well as of publisher spyware in software for libraries.
This kind of research tracking can "fundamentally contradict academic freedom". Thus, the academic community should "reflect on the practice of tracking, its legality, the measures required for compliance with data protection and the consequences of the aggregation of usage data"
"noyb developed a software that recognizes various types of unlawful cookie banners and automatically generates complaints ... noyb will give companies a one-month grace period to comply with EU laws before filing the formal complaint"
"Instead of giving a simple yes or no option, companies use every trick in the book to manipulate users. We have identified more than fifteen common abuses. The most common issue is that there is simply no ‘reject’ button..."
EU regulators should have stopped this years ago.
"First 560 websites in 33 countries got a (free) draft complaint today. noyb started the new system today and delivered the first draft complaints to 560 websites from 33 countries ... Over the course of the year 2021, noyb plans to follow up with up to 10.000 further complaints"
"Ring is the largest civilian surveillance network the US has ever seen"
"One in 10 US police departments can now access videos from millions of ... home security cameras without a warrant ... extending the reach of law enforcement into private property" theguardian.com/commentisfree/…
"Because Ring cameras are owned by civilians, law enforcement are given a backdoor entry into private video recordings of people in residential and public space that would otherwise be protected"
"By partnering with Amazon, law enforcement circumvents these ... protections"
"Ring blurs the line between police work and civilian surveillance and turns your neighbor’s home security system into an informant"
"...since Amazon bought Ring in 2018, it has brokered more than 1,800 partnerships with local law enforcement agencies" in the US.
Interesting. Since I tweeted that I observed the mental health counseling platform BetterHelp sending personal data to FB, it updated its privacy policy & added a weird "you must consent to use our services" popup for EU users, including an extra checkbox. betterhelp.com/privacy/
I'm pretty sure it wasn't there when I visited the site in March, and when it shared data on me with FB according to 'Off-Facebook Activity':
Anyway, I guess the popup violates the GDPR because it makes the provision of the service conditional on consent.
After 'consenting', it still transmits 'PageView' data to FB, which is certainly not 'necessary' for the performance of the contract. Also, this is about sharing 'personal data' and not about 'anonymous' cookies.
If consent is not "freely given", it is not valid under the GDPR.
"You can easily monitor web and application usage, and watch what’s happening on your staff screens live or on-demand. Check what they type, search on the Web, what files they copy and much more … runs in stealth mode on a work computer"