Once a shadowy marketplace for trading personal information, data brokers now face an existential crisis caused by a shifting data commerce market, risking their future.
In the first chapter the leadership complaint is, “We need more trust,”.
…
People in the Intel industry are mass surveilling the American public on a manufactured legal basis, [a Constitutional shunt based on counterterror]. They violate US Constitutional entitlements to freedom from search and seizure. Then they created a business system that capitalizes, predatorially, on their lack of legal privacy using platforms they subsidized and created like, Facebook.
Stop surveilling every damn transaction we do online and maybe we can talk in 10 years about ‘trust’ again. For now, the American public were never compensated for the license of their personal information by brokers. They were farmed. People are getting out from under this, if there is no incentive. It's a bad deal.
Having been in the list business for decades, it escapes me how exactly making it hard bordering on impossible to deliver relevant commercial messages to prospective consumers will facilitate economic growth.
At best, it will increase supply side concentration by requiring marketers to target every consumer to reach their perfect prospects.
I’m reading a book, *Hard Work Is Not Enough*.
In the first chapter the leadership complaint is, “We need more trust,”.
…
People in the Intel industry are mass surveilling the American public on a manufactured legal basis, [a Constitutional shunt based on counterterror]. They violate US Constitutional entitlements to freedom from search and seizure. Then they created a business system that capitalizes, predatorially, on their lack of legal privacy using platforms they subsidized and created like, Facebook.
Stop surveilling every damn transaction we do online and maybe we can talk in 10 years about ‘trust’ again. For now, the American public were never compensated for the license of their personal information by brokers. They were farmed. People are getting out from under this, if there is no incentive. It's a bad deal.
Having been in the list business for decades, it escapes me how exactly making it hard bordering on impossible to deliver relevant commercial messages to prospective consumers will facilitate economic growth.
At best, it will increase supply side concentration by requiring marketers to target every consumer to reach their perfect prospects.