Once certain platforms reach a critical mass, choosing to not use the platform or service can exclude individuals from participating in our digital society. For example, if someone was uncomfortable with Facebook’s data retention, tracking, monetization and ad targeting system, they could in theory opt out of the service. However, the social downside for many individuals is too extensive to justify.
Few people are willing to sever convenient and expected social interactions due to a service’s ad targeting systems and user data sharing policies. Moreover, once we examine the holdings of the largest technology companies, Facebook owns Instagram, Alphabet owns Google, Google products include gmail, google docs and calendar, Apple controls the content on users’ iPhones and access to both the App Store and iTunes, Amazon owns everything from your digital reading library (i.e. Kindle), to grocery stores and pharmacies, resisting authorizing the use of one’s personal digital information begins to look at best eccentric and worst, entirely impractical.
XKCD: Opinions on Internet Privacy 1269
While we may not want to forgo participating in the 21st century, that doesn’t mean we can’t reverse the trend of oversharing personal data.
For example, Login with SelfKey, which provides one-click OAuth login, is part of the SelfKey Identity Wallet product suite. Currently, the SelfKey Identity Wallet enables individuals to s_ecurely store personal data and digital assets on their local machine_. Soon, SelfKey Wallet users will be able to not only safely send and receive digital assets, but securing login to third party services, via Login with SelfKey.
“Convenience of one-click login, must not come at the price of unnecessarily oversharing personal data”
Perhaps most critically, SelfKey Wallet users will have complete control as to the scope of what personal information they share and with whom. Convenience of one-click login, must not come at the price of unnecessarily oversharing personal data. Perhaps a Login with SelfKey user doesn’t want to share their social network details or browser history signing up for and using a new service. Likewise, there’s no need to send your browser and application history back to social media platforms, furthering the problem of unnecessarily oversharing personal information — which get repackaged, targeted or utilized as a digital commodity.
Stop feeding the beast! Altering industry expectations of who should be in control of individual personal information is the best way to destroy the pernicious, loss-of-privacy, feedback loop. While we can’t prevent Facebook, Twitter or Google from tracking what you do while utilizing their services, you can start to control what is shared with them while privately using other services. Login with SelfKey and other Digital Identity Wallets are altering the norm.
Brave, a privacy focused web browser, compensates users for viewing ads. Brave is a massive step in the right direction, that deliberately involves and expressly compensates individuals for participating in their ad targeting system. Another example of the growing shift is DuckDuckGo, a privacy focused search engine, which has made tremendous technical strides, providing additional privacy-focused consumer choices.