Data Brokers Are a Threat to Democracy
Unless the federal government steps up, the unchecked middlemen
of surveillance capitalism will continue to harm our civil rights
and national security.
Justin Sherman
You’ve probably never heard of Acxiom, but it likely knows you: The
Arkansas firm claims to have data on 2.5 billion people around the
world. And in the US, if someone’s interested in that information,
there are virtually no restrictions on their ability to buy and then
use it.
Enter the data brokerage industry, the multibillion dollar economy
of selling consumers’ and citizens’ intimate details. Much of the
privacy discourse has rightly pointed fingers at Facebook, Twitter,
YouTube, and TikTok, which collect users’ information directly. But
a far broader ecosystem of buying up, licensing, selling, and
sharing data exists around those platforms. Data brokerage firms are
middlemen of surveillance capitalism—purchasing, aggregating, and
repackaging data from a variety of other companies, all with the aim
of selling or further distributing it.
Data brokerage is a threat to democracy.
[...]
continua qui:
https://www.wired.com/story/opinion-data-brokers-are-a-threat-to-democracy/