Friday, November 11, 2022

Certainties of Life: Online Consumer Data Collection

I would rather live my life as if there is a God and die to find out there isn't, than live as if there isn't and to die to find out that there is.
— Albert Camus, born in 1913


Solving Certainties of life Death and Taxes at La Peruse
                        Solving certainties of life and taxes with colourful catholic characters ...

2023 Privacy Guide – The fundamental concept of privacy has changed dramatically as more individuals have shifted most of their data to online platforms.


CRS Report – Online Consumer Data Collection, October 31, 2022 – “Large amounts of consumer data can be collected, processed, and analyzedby operators of websites and mobile applications (apps) and third parties, which are entities otherthan the website or appprimary operator (e.g., data brokers).

 Operators collect data for multiple purposes, including providing services, selling user data to third parties,or sending targeted ads directed to specific individuals. The value of consumer data often comes from identifying users and linking their data from various sources to a common identifier. Operators can identify individuals using their personally identifiable information (PII)—such as name, address, or date of birth—and other identifiers, such as those associated with a particular device. Some federal laws prevent entities from collecting or sharing specific types of PII or identifiersin certain circumstances. 

However, in recent decades, the ubiquityof non-PII (data not directly linked to an individual’s identity, including anonymized or aggregated data) and the emergence of new data collection andt racking tools have made it easier to identify individuals. Consumer data can be collected using various data collection and tracking tools, such as cookies, pixels, device and browser fingerprinting, application programming interfaces (APIs), and software development kits (SDKs). These tools can continuously collect different types of data, including identifiers, even when the consumer visits a different website or app. Some of these tools are necessary for websites and apps to provide services, and others typically are used for online advertising.

 Some of these tools can be used to help develop a website or app and offer services provided by other operators, which can increase competition.They also can be used to collect large amounts of data, particularly by third parties, causing some to raise consumer data privacy concerns. The United States does not have a comprehensive federal data protection law, although multiple federal statutes create data protection obligations for particular types of information or for entities engaged in certain activities…


 Swarming bees stir up their own electric fieldsScience

Articles of Note

Stephen Elliot made a name for himself by turning self-destruction into art. Is his "shitty media men" lawsuit any different? different media dragon »


New Books

Self-injury as a form of expression can offer agency to the artist. But what's in it for the audience? »




Essays & Opinions

A collective amnesia stalks the book world: We assume queer writing is found only in the present. That’s wrong  »


EPIC: “Algorithms Quietly Run the City of DC and Maybe Your Hometown - EPICThe D.C. government outsources critical governmental decisions to automated decision-making systems in areas such as public benefits, healthcare, policing, and housing. As a result, District residents are surveilled, screened, and scored every day. But because of weak government transparency laws, opaque procurement processes, the power and influence of tech vendors, and the decline in local journalism, it has been difficult to uncover the details of how many automated decision-making systems are used in government programs.  EPIC spent 14 months investigating the D.C. government’s use of automated decision-making systems. This report [Screened Scored in the District of Columbia] aims to shed light by providing as comprehensive a view as possible of the many automated decision-making systems that shape the course of District residents’ lives.”