Podcast & livestream on #dataprivacy ๐ฉโ๐ป How do businesses use our data and where do they cross the line? Hosted by @TejasGadhia, with @BrentLeary and @RajuV
Join us today as we discuss results of a recent Data Privacy and Generative AI Usage Survey. Lots of interesting data to dig through, can't wait! https://t.co/ehcrAC5zGV
Costco joins retailers like Walmart and Target in monetizing customer data, allowing advertisers to target based on past shopping behavior.
https://t.co/gpQsnAkm6v
The emerging trend of individualized pricing powered by consumer data tracking poses risks to economic liberty and calls for regulatory action to protect public, non-discriminatory pricing.
https://t.co/UwvnpT6aqn
Facial recognition firm Clearview AI avoids bankruptcy by offering 23% ownership to class members in privacy case instead of cash payouts.
https://t.co/zdVLyIDGfk
Major DNS providers instructed to prevent circumvention of piracy blocks, raising concerns over public DNS tampering and internet freedom.
https://t.co/rwRwYM3j1D
"Amazonโs Alexa collected sensitive data on 28 out of 32 possible data points, including address, location, photos, videos, audio data, and browsing history. Google, collected data on 22 such points."
https://t.co/LhntggZDZD
The facial recognition start-up Clearview AI doesnโt have the funds to settle a class-action lawsuit, so lawyers are proposing equity for those whose faces were scraped from the internet.
https://t.co/7JlKDQig9W
The rise of "surveillance pricing" means the same product could cost vastly different amounts for different people based on their data profiles. https://t.co/IbkcaERuRj
23andMe tells victims it's their fault that their data was breached https://t.co/sA0w9sMGSk
-> it's your fault your data was stolen lolz.
p.s. if hackers can turn 14,000 accounts into access to 6.9 million, that seems to be a "you" problem not a user problem. Thus the lawsuits
Genetic testing giant 23andMe is reportedly turning the blame back on its customers for its recent data breach https://t.co/ze7C3ydSkG via @businessinsider
Amazonโs Ring home doorbell unit says it will stop letting police departments request footage from usersโ video doorbells and surveillance cameras https://t.co/BdoiDAnINY via @technology