from DSSResources.comWho owns all the data collected about you?By John F. McMullen, November 12, 2014 http://www.techopedia.com/2/30973/trends/who-owns-your-information Takeaway: Who has the right to collect and sell your data? It seems like just about anyone!
My guest on the Sunday October 26 episode of the "Weekly johnmac Radio Show" was the editor of the "Fierce Big Data" blog/newsletter and author of "Data Divination: Big Data Strategies," Pam Baker.
To better understand the mechanics of mailing lists, I called Jack May, an old friend, former guest on the radio show, and ex-vice president and chief information officer of Americomm LLC, one of the most successful mailing list firms in the business. The way I now understand the process is that a customer of Americomm, a firm like the Danbury Mint, would request a mailing list of people based on some criteria. The criteria could be geographic (state, city, zip code, or even a particular neighborhood or street), or demographic (estimated income, value of home if owned, buying habits, etc.), or a combination of both. Americomm would then purchase a list of persons fitting the required criteria from firms that collect data, consolidate it as best it can to individual persons, analyze it and classify the individual where necessary. Of the firms from which Americomm might buy the data, the largest and most well known is Acxiom. Its data-collection activities are well described in Washington Post investigative reporter Robert O’Harrow’s 2005 book "No Place To Hide." Americomm may purchase, or "rent," this data on a single-use basis or, if it thinks the information is marketable to others, on a multi-use basis. Americomm will then process this data into the form desired by the customer. May told me that there were many ways that Acxiom or another firm could have pieced together the information about which I was inquiring from many sources. He typed in my physical address and found information about my house - some of it wrong. There is much information released by the United States Census that is usable, there are tax records, there are records of my purchases, there are my status updates on social networks, etc. So, in a nutshell, some firm, perhaps Acxion, has collected (and continues to collect) scads of data on me and consolidated it into a profile of me. This profile, unfortunately, is not available for me to examine and correct any errors. I just spoke to the aforementioned Bob O’Harrow to verify that fact. Acxiom will not furnish me all the information that it has on me. It will, however, sell me a portion of the information it has collected about me. Note that I did not refer to it as "my information;" even though it is about me, it now seemingly belongs to Acxiom, which can do with it what it wants. Acxiom was in the news fairly recently when a New York Times article reported that the University of Pittsburgh Hospital’s Insurance Service has been purchasing Acxiom information on its clients - without telling them. The insurance company had the clients fill out lengthy forms to be used in "predictive analysis," an attempt to plan for required care (and reduce costs). It was then supplementing this information with the Acxiom data which might, in some cases contradict the data furnished by the client. So, we have companies collecting all the information they can possibly find about us, consolidating and analyzing it, selling to whomever they wish (including the government), while withholding much, if not most, of it from those on whom it was collected - the same people who receive all the ads based on its collection. We also have firms that we are paying for service (such as the insurance company above) who are secretly collecting information on us, their clients, and, perhaps, making judgments based on such information. Welcome to the world of big data! It's going to be an interesting ride. (Learn more in 5 Privacy Problems That Come With Big Data.) |