- Mar 24, 2012
- 6,100
- 675
This is a very, very broad topic that would be too dense to go in depth in one post. I'm sure most of you are aware of the fact that big companies (Google, Apple, Microsoft, Facebook, Cellphone companies, etc.) collect your "personal data" and use it for marketing, and shaping your habits and sometimes your thoughts. This isn't meant as a "be afraid" topic, but more of an awareness. Btw, you can also opt out of many forms of advertisement if you just search (credit cards in the mail, cellphone data collection, email spam, etc).
My question is: are you at all concerned about why and how they are using this data?
People are so used to giving away their personal information without a second thought. We agree to terms that nobody reads, fail to question the vague language used in some privacy statements, and don't think about why companies are more interested in your information than anyone else.
There are a few short answers to why they want your data.
1) They use your data to predict your behavior, influence your decisions, and essentially increase their profits. Think of it as a person who watches what you use your electronics for every day (which is often called "Big Brother"). They can tell someone what pictures you like, videos you watch, stuff you order, who your friends are, where you've been, where you go to school, where you work, what your last text message was, what your phone call was about, what is on your computer, and so much more! In fact, Google shapes their results based on things you've searched in the past. It will omit certain sides of an issue while highlighting others. If another person searches the same idea, they may get completely different results!
2) They can manipulate your behavior and heavily influence your thoughts to the point that they can predict what you will likely do. This is typically a result from good and constance advertisement which has experts in the psychology of human behavior. Think about this question: If you bought a new phone, which brand would be your first? Now, why did you think of that brand? You might answer like "well I'm use to it, it's reliable, good specs, etc." When in reality it's been branded into your first-thought process from constant advertisement until it became your default action. Think of the next one: If you bought a soda, which would you buy? There's different brands, but habit and thoughts go hand-in-hand. You're likely to get the same round of drinks every time instead of always trying something new. Now this is natural human behavior, which is why it works so well in advertisement. It's a sort of behavioral reward process which was introduced by B. F. Skinner's "Operant Conditioning." Basically, he got an animal to do a certain behavior and rewarded it until the habit was formed. People have these habits too which are VERY hard to break because of addiction. We are addicted to many things: Social media, music, food, even things that people know is bad for them. All because of this reward process in shaping your behavior.
Pretty much everything we buy, or even get "for free" is surrounded by an advertisement of some sort. The computer software you use, the brand of tea/coffee you drink, all of these things are a daily re-enforcement of the behaviors. Even if you freely choose to pick a different product, it all falls under the same umbrella.
My question is: are you at all concerned about why and how they are using this data?
People are so used to giving away their personal information without a second thought. We agree to terms that nobody reads, fail to question the vague language used in some privacy statements, and don't think about why companies are more interested in your information than anyone else.
There are a few short answers to why they want your data.
1) They use your data to predict your behavior, influence your decisions, and essentially increase their profits. Think of it as a person who watches what you use your electronics for every day (which is often called "Big Brother"). They can tell someone what pictures you like, videos you watch, stuff you order, who your friends are, where you've been, where you go to school, where you work, what your last text message was, what your phone call was about, what is on your computer, and so much more! In fact, Google shapes their results based on things you've searched in the past. It will omit certain sides of an issue while highlighting others. If another person searches the same idea, they may get completely different results!
2) They can manipulate your behavior and heavily influence your thoughts to the point that they can predict what you will likely do. This is typically a result from good and constance advertisement which has experts in the psychology of human behavior. Think about this question: If you bought a new phone, which brand would be your first? Now, why did you think of that brand? You might answer like "well I'm use to it, it's reliable, good specs, etc." When in reality it's been branded into your first-thought process from constant advertisement until it became your default action. Think of the next one: If you bought a soda, which would you buy? There's different brands, but habit and thoughts go hand-in-hand. You're likely to get the same round of drinks every time instead of always trying something new. Now this is natural human behavior, which is why it works so well in advertisement. It's a sort of behavioral reward process which was introduced by B. F. Skinner's "Operant Conditioning." Basically, he got an animal to do a certain behavior and rewarded it until the habit was formed. People have these habits too which are VERY hard to break because of addiction. We are addicted to many things: Social media, music, food, even things that people know is bad for them. All because of this reward process in shaping your behavior.
Pretty much everything we buy, or even get "for free" is surrounded by an advertisement of some sort. The computer software you use, the brand of tea/coffee you drink, all of these things are a daily re-enforcement of the behaviors. Even if you freely choose to pick a different product, it all falls under the same umbrella.