Massive tech companies are eroticism in teresa of avilawatching who you are and what you do on the internet, and there's not much you can do about it.
Fortunately, the European Union is here to save at least some of us.
The EU is less than six months away from instituting the most aggressive personal data protections ever seen, limiting how tech companies can collect, secure, and use your information — and making sure they let you know just what they're doing.
The rules will put the EU far ahead of the U.S. in terms of regulating tech companies. The U.S. is considering no such rules at this time.
SEE ALSO: Private companies could have access to this country's facial recognition databaseFacebook and Google both use vast troves of data (some that you provide directly, some that it collects as you surf the internet) to show you hyper-targeted ads. This is why the two companies have come to dominate the growing online advertising market.
The EU isn't about to stop these companies from using data, but it is working to make sure that the companies are acting responsibly — in the form of the General Data Protection Regulation, which goes into effect for member nations in May 2018.
In April 2016, the EU adopted the GDPR, an expansive data privacy measure that turns the heat up on companies and organizations that make use of peoples' personal information. The new regulations govern the ways an individual's private data can be collected and exploited.
It doesn't go into effect until May 2018, but its arrival will fundamentally reshape the way certain companies conduct business online. That's a big reason why there's been such a lengthy runway between the GDPR's adoption and implementation.
Non-compliance equates to massive fines: For the most serious infringements -- which include exploiting user data without the proper consent -- it's up to 4 percent of a company's annual income, or €20 million.
This changes the EU landscape significantly for a company like Facebook. The social network's "Cookie Consent Guide for Sites and Apps" includes an extensive breakdown of how new consent rules will work in the EU specifically, and which types of interests they'll impact.
The same info page addresses how consent works throughout the rest of the world -- including the U.S. -- in a single sentence: "Outside of the EU, other laws and rules may require you to provide notice and obtain consent to collect and use data from your site or app."
That disparity alone, between the laborious breakdown of EU consent rules and the one-sentence "other countries may vary" explanation, makes an eloquent point about the GDPR on its own: This is serious stuff.
Under the GDPR, any business or organization that works with user data online will be required to explain, up front and transparently, what they're collecting and why they're collecting it. Further, certain types of data come with explicit consent requirements, and users are permitted to withdraw that consent -- and have any collected data erased -- at any time.
The new regulation applies a broad definition to what qualifies as personal data. Certainly your name, age, profession, and all the other basic details one would normally list on their social media profiles. But it also covers IP addresses, location data, and web browsing cookies.
Then there are the more sensitive, consent-required data points, including a person's race or ethnicity, politics, union membership, philosophical beliefs, and genetic or biometric information. Data collectors must seek consent to gather and use this information, and they're required to purge it upon request.
Importantly, the GDPR requires a high level of transparency. A company can't simply put a dense, 30-page EULA in front of you, have you check off a box at the bottom -- or pre-check it for you -- and call it a day.
"One of the things we have high hopes for significant change under the GDPR is how transparency is really delivered to users, particularly by these internet companies," Ireland's Data Protection Commissioner Helen Dixon told Wiredin July. "We know from our engagement with them that a lot of them are looking very proactively at how they are going to do the transparency under the GDPR."
The regulation takes more of a common sense approach than U.S. citizens are used to: If some tech company wants to use your data, they need to be straight about what they're collecting, how they'll use it, and who else (if anyone) will see it. They're also required to share what they've collected upon request and obtain consent, in cases that call for it.
All of these new rules present a bigger issue for a social network like Facebook than a search engine business like Google. That's because Facebook's targeted ads depend on data gathered from individual user profiles, whereas Google leans on anonymized search results to serve ads.
In the case of a social network like Facebook, users will need to be provided with clear, intelligible instructions for providing andrevoking consent, and having their personal data deleted if they so choose. They'll also need to be informed of how their data will be put to use and which other parties will have access to it, if any.
Some have suggested the EU is choosing sides, since an account-driven data collector like Facebook faces a more laborious set of changes under the GDPR than a search engine like Google. In truth, the explanation is much simpler: GDPR functions to protect the end-user, rather than aid the data collector. Facebook needs to make fundamental changes because, well, its methods of gathering and using your data aren't the most transparent.
Email marketing platforms also have some work to do as they prepare for the reality of a post-GDPR EU. Documentation released by MailChimp, to point to just one example, notes that recipients of the company's emails will be able to opt out of everything in one go.
That option is a function of the GDPR's "Right to be Forgotten" article. As MailChimp's updated guidelines state: "You may terminate your MailChimp account at any time, in which case we will permanently delete your account and all data associated with it."
Fundamentally, the GDPR is driven by the common-sense belief that end-users should be given a clear understanding of exactly what they're signing up for when they join a new social network, or consent to their personal data being exploited in some way. If it seems like this is a no-brainer, that's because it is.
User data is one of the most valuable assets available to online businesses today, and these new EU regulations aim to make that value clearer to the end user. The absence of any similar legislation in the U.S. is primarily a testament to the power of the country's tech lobby.
Someone watched 'Pirates of the Caribbean' on Netflix 365 days in a rowTinder tests a new feed feature to move 'beyond the swipe'Researchers to listen for signs of life from interstellar asteroidApple launches handy pre'The Last Jedi' movie review: Star Wars filmmaking hits full throttleEthereum's price surpasses $700 in another astonishing cryptoLouis Tomlinson fans abuse radio host on Twitter after facial hair jokeGrandma accidentally buys super sexy Christmas decorationsNorth Korea, exiled from the global economy, turns to bitcoinSynaptics Incorporated puts a fingerprint scanner under a touchscreenSynaptics Incorporated puts a fingerprint scanner under a touchscreenChief Hopper from 'Stranger Things' is the newest holiday victim in a Photoshop battleProgrammer finds keylogger on hundreds of HP computer models'The Simpsons' writer unveils cut scene from 'Who Shot Mr Burns?' episode'The Last Jedi' first reactions from premiere'Stranger Things' gets a VR experience from PlayStationWatching strangers help push a bus stuck in the snow will put you in the Christmas spiritProgrammer finds keylogger on hundreds of HP computer modelsThe net neutrality vote, explainedKumail Nanjiani shares story about 'Star Wars: The Last Jedi' director Polish woman was booed for saying she feels unwelcome in the UK Genius woman lures neighbors to yard sale with photos of celebrities How your smart device caused the internet to crash and burn Mega merger alert: AT&T to pay $85 billion for Time Warner Anne Hathaway reveals of Oscar win, 'I tried to pretend that I was happy' U.N. criticized for naming Wonder Woman honorary ambassador The Walking Dead Season 7 spoilers: Who Does Negan Kill? Clinton and Trump were actually sort of nice to each other at the Al Smith dinner 8 marginalized groups still fighting for the freedom to vote in the U.S. Watch out, AT&T: Trump says he opposes your Time Warner merger Donald Glover to play Lando Calrissian in 'Han Solo' movie Article on 'fairy bread' incurs the wrath of an angry nation The one thing you need to do to stop your home devices from getting hacked 'Deliver At All Costs' review: Chatioc fun with a nonsensical story The Exorcist Episode 5 reveals the shocking truth about Angela Rance Intense video shows great white shark getting stuck inside a cage with 4 divers Donald Trump's unprecedented lack of ad spending has hurt local media The iPhone has a hidden one Watch tiny gourmet dishes get prepped with sublime skill About 100,000 devices helped take down the internet via a cyberattack
1.7099s , 10218.9375 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【eroticism in teresa of avila】,New Knowledge Information Network