Big Data Knows ALL About You
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- Опубликовано: 4 дек 2023
- The government is tracking you.
Here’s HOW they do it and WHY you should care.
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@NaomiBrockwellTV has a popular RUclips channel where she points out that the government constantly spies on us, using data that apps collect via our phones.
But these apps “make my life easier,” I push back,“Convenience matters!”
“But privacy is important,” explains Brockwell. "The government is purchasing all this data about us. They’re creating records about all of us, and that's a really scary thing.”
"That data is forever … You have no control over what societal norms might change in the next 10 years and that data suddenly becomes incriminating. You're basically making a bet that you and the people with the guns will always stay on good terms.”
In my video above, she explains why that’s not a good bet to make.
I love how John almost always plays the "devil's advocate" in any argument/interview. He's not afraid to ask the tough, or even obnoxious questions.
In this case, he kind of scared me. He seemed to like his convenience too much.
If he were convinced it is ok what big tech and the government are doing, he wouldn’t have posted this video.
@@eugenetswonghe's being facetious brooo...
@@kylelaw7210Great point!
I find it funny that everyone in this thread appears to be using their real name. 🙃🤣😂
I love how John always pressures her with arguments even though he completely agrees with her. That's an example of great journalism.
It cracks me up when he tries to play devils advocate. You can tell he doesn’t believe it with a twinkle in his eye but it’s due diligence 😂
The art of the objective opinion doesn't exist in these phony "commentary satire" "news" stations anymore. John has a charming knack too! He was always my favorite on 20/20 & I ended up doing a lot of work in consumer rights, maybe he was an influence in how that transpired. He exposed the crooks & his reports were always the best!!! That show was never the same after that era.
Its the same, he still holds everyone accountable. You changed, and you expect him to . its subconcious though, clearly.@@melissahouse3488
It’s one of his signatures.
@@Douglas_Gillette Best part you can see in his smile the contempt of the arguments he’s putting fourth🙏
This makes "Give me the man and I will give you the case against him." much easier for the government.
And yet, how many of the 91 indictments against Trump still had to be fabricated out of thin air?
Exactly!
Why run from the flame when you can use it? If the government knows everything about you, what is to stop you from using that information to steer its response to your actions?
As if they needed a 'case' to persecute you?
The number of people repeating the "if you don't have anything to hide" line that I grew up being used as an example of totalitarianism is terrifying.
Those in power have a way of moving the goalposts when convenient.
The day is coming when Americans will have to choose between their Internet addiction (which FEEDS these illegal activities), and their Constitutional rights
I'm almost 64 and believe that it's never going to happen. They have been brain washing the young for years now. And taking away parents rights to bring up their own children. They have been destroying the family base as was what was known. I have almost given up hope that people would come together. And just look at how hard they are going after TRUMP to keep him out of the presidential election.
I think that day has come it's just that people have their heads in the sand, they'll do anything to keep their precious conveniences
The day has arrived.
False dichotomy, we can have an internet WITHOUT an oppressive government
The future is unknown and too scary to predict
The problem is, it's irrelevant information today that doesn't matter, but tomorrow it will become incriminating evidence.
Witness the people having their lives destroyed because of something they said or posted many years ago.
THAT'S the problem?
So I guess you should also avoid talking to people, because whatever you say, tomorrow may become incriminating evidence. Also avoid go outside, who knows what people could be seen with you. Definitely avoid buying stuff, as store knows what you have. Avoid banks, they know all about your money.
@@leonidfro8302A ridiculous comparison.
@@elliottpeabody1287 That, and it's unavoidable to not use anything that collects data if you want to live a normal life.
This is harrowing. We are all being called guilty until proven innocent, and only the highest crooks will be called innocent.
in the 90s my uncle was worrier the government was spying on us and tapping the phones. Today, not just do we know that they are doing it, we pay for the device and pay monthly fee for them to do it.
In Canada, our police let other countries do it, and then pay for the information. It's so disgusting.
100% That's why I say Orwell was an optimist. At least in 1984 the Party ordered everyone to have their 2 way telescreens under threat of force, but here people line up and pay thousands of dollars for the latest incremental 'improvement'.
I watched a law enforcement video back when cell phones became a thing. Wire Tapping always 'required' a legal order while wireless communication is free of that. Regardless of encryption or any other form of privacy used - it is still legal to intercept any wireless communication.
Yup it's crazy, Britain spies on USA citizens and America spies on Britain citizens, then they share the information they have mined. It is not unconstitutional technically, they are just working around the constitution, and selling our rights out. Evil. It is more than just our countries, many are in the loop.@@eugenetswong
I believe all smartphones of all brands have these hundreds, if not thousands of 'companies' that will receive, 'parts', of your data. So basically, yeah.
People wonder why I have a piece of tape over my phone and laptop cameras. 😁
I do too for many years but I'm sure it's of no use with big brother watching every move I make in the marketplace plus my photo gallery.
This is why half the apps on my phone don't work. I never give an app permission to access anything!
"A woman who wanted to murder her child just overnight became a criminal."
Yea, that's a good thing.
SNOWDEN WAS RIGHT
You can’t have freedom without privacy
"Isn't it interesting that the only road to social Utopia, requires absolute surveillance of every aspect of your life." ~Jim Lakely VP, The Heartland Institute
This is why I have no mainstream social media accounts. No Facebook. No Twitter/X. No Instagram. Nothing. Even this account is simply a username connected to my Gmail acct, and not a proper RUclips account, and I only use it for spam.
This does not mean, of course, there isn't anything about me online. I'm just doing what I can to keep it to a minimum.
The creepy thing is your phone listenes to you talking and then sends you ads based on your conversations.
I swear I’ve gotten ads based just on my thoughts. For stuff I’ve never said or searched…just thought about. 😱
I started turning my phone on when I need it. Missed calls? I grew up with land lines and they have this awesome thing called an answering service. I'm not a slave to that 'thing'.
@@terrylandess6072 yeah I’ve had to teach my kids that you don’t have to answer every text or phone call that comes in right away… you decide when you look at your phone… it’s not that your phone decides when you look at it.
That’s the first step not getting addicted …. it is a service that I use not something I am responsible to pay attention to constantly.
Half the time, my phones on silent, and I will check it occasionally to see if anybody has texted me when I have a free moment .
EVERYONE NOW HAS THEIR OWN PERSONAL TRACKING DEVICE....we just happen to call it a phone!!!
Remember when everyone was creeped out by the targeted advertising in the Tom Cruise movie minority report? This is simply the beginning stages of how you end up in a society like that. Unfortunately, we now have an entire generation that doesn’t remember what privacy even looks like, so they have no idea what was lost. Unless those of us who do remember push back and stop this, privacy may be lost for generations.
And they use the movies to desensitize us!
While I agree with your statement (I am old enough to remember rotary-dial phones), how many of us would be willing to give up the conveniences we are so addicted to? And I don't mean going back to flip-phones. Would we be willing to actually buy these apps or pay for subscriptions to remove their targeted ad capability? It'll be interesting to see how X handles this situation if/when their advertisers all pull out of the platform after Elon told them to go f**k themselves.
@@Psalm2710_ Who would have ever thought the government could combine 1984 and Idiocracy?
Philip K Dick anticipated so much of this decades ago in his fiction (he was the author of minority report, the book that became blade runner, etc). He was truly a prophet.
This is why it's called the LONG GAME. One cannot expect entire generations to readily accept things which they know is bad, so half measures keep them quiet while indoctrinating the next generation to think it's okay. And it WORKS.
"Show me the man and I'll show you the crime" IS SO YESTERDAY, at least according to those who never bothered with history.
when the criminals make the laws, you will never have justice
Accirding to the ads I accidentally see, they have no clue about me.
Privacy is power. What people don't know, they can't ruin.
Every day, it seems more and more that the Amish were right about the trappings of convenience
"Arguing that you don't care about the right to privacy because you have nothing to hide is no different than saying you don't care about free speech because you have nothing to say."
- Edward Snowden
I agree somewhat with very little of the information needed by an 'app' concerning your privacy, but since they keep it, all of it 'forever', instead of deleting it, then there is obviously something else at work which even the most simple person should be able to understand.
@@MindlessTube Witch hunt societies are the rule, not the exception.
I think it's good they included China as an example of how detrimental it can be when the government knows too much about your private activity.
Just before YoTub deletes this video?
Almost laughed. China are amatures compared to the United States as it relates to surveillance, both domestic and foreign. They are just a bit more open about it and they are pounded for it by the narrative industrial complex of the west for show and propaganda.
Are we not equating to completely different governmental ideologies?
In one system, the citizens have rights and the government's job is to protect and define those rights (as it is mostly, but not perfectly done), the other is a Wild West where anything goes what the current leader/party states.
The US Govt, our NGOs, and US Corporations are more concerning to me than the CCP.
@@JhiinTraxx are you insinuating that the current circumstances are much different? how do you think the CCP rose to power? through the literal exact same way american politicians are doing so right now. They say freedom is dangerous, security is everything, information by the state is the only thing credible, cancelling the opposition is democracy, and supporting angry mobs (think BLM, Antifa, etc) is important to support 'the right cause' on the streets.
I'm so glad she's making an effort to inform the public about these dangers. This is pretty insidious stuff, and needs to be taken seriously!
When you become so rich that the only thing which challenges you is making more money and using it to manipulate others because people are greedy. You can bet there's a LOT of insidious stuff going on which occasionally gets exposed and just as quickly covered up.
I retired from one of our intelligence community agencies 13 years ago. Even back then, we were collecting the majority of our intel from private (and fully cooperative) companies. I can only imagine that percentage has gone up.
John, don't ask people who are in the show bizz industry. Ask all the little guys and gals in middle America how they feel being watched by the government? Our lives are simple and private.
Love stossel, always talking the truth 💯 yes privacy matters
It's "The Stoss", if you truly love him, respect The Stoss and The 'Stache!
@@OB.x, that’s funny! 😂😂😂😂
I particularly enjoy how he takes the opposing view or plays devil's advocate to get the interviewee to defend their position. This is what actual journalism looks like.
@@OB.x The Stoss is the man!
The Real issue is if you Don’t “Allow” all these apps to track and have access to your data…..you simply CANNOT use them.
There are very few of ANY apps When one is given the option to “Decline Terms of Service” and still be able to use the product.
This needs legislation.
Here’s where it’s going and imagine this analogy.
The Next vehicle you buy, you must sign saying that the manufacturer has a right to track and log everywhere you go and send it to any “3rd party” it cares to.
If you DO NOT AGREE to those terms then you simply Arwnt allowed to purchase the car!!!
That’s where we are at with apps
Except that all sounds reasonable. You don't have a right to dictate what product is sold to you, you only have a right to dictate what product you decide to buy. That said, at least in the US the federal courts have upheld that it is not a crime to break a ToS and there are plenty of ways to get around a lot of the tracking if you want to. I also want to add that if we take a different path and give people legal immunity to tracking then we are just asking for every rich paedo and con artist to cream themselves at once.
So stop using apps, they're not mandatory. It's incredible when I hear people say "I don't want to stop, the government should step in for me." That's how we get authoritarianism.
I bet everyone who says "I've got nothing to hide" has a password on their phone
And why they don’t realize every single one of us DO have something to hide: our private lives. Do you really want somebody knowing everything you’ve said in private?! I think not.
This is also why neural link and other devices that will allow people to communicate via thought or let people hear your thoughts …. Man if you ever forgot to turn that off.?!
Do we really want to risk people hearing what we really think about them and other things?
All I know is I try to live a pretty good life as a Christian and I definitely have thoughts I do not want people knowing about as many of us do .
What is to say that somebody can’t hack into NeuroLink or something similar and incriminate us by our own thoughts that we would never actually act on because we thought we are now criminals .
We are moving into a very scary world that nobody actually wants to live in .
The single MOST important thing that governments can learn about individuals is their political leanings. This is unstoppable.
They find out everyone is actually racist 😂
false.
You trust your government 100% don't you???
If you have a voter registration card, then you've been doing this for decades.
@@hhout9242 I unregistered after 2020 as I believe employers discriminate.
How is it that this channel does not have 15 million subscribers? This is journalism as its best.
Shadow bans
I just said the same thing😂
Truthfully, one good reason is this is five years late. This has been common knowledge for quite a while now.
@@RichardTavilla I disagree The ones with the most subscribers are the ones who talk about literally nothing. A lot of people want quick entertainment. Many people with short attention spans fuel this.
She brings up a massive warning almost nobody ever thinks about: there is a real gamble that the APP company you trust doesn't eventually sell it to some other shady company that decides to use whatever it wants however it wants.
Some of us already do this. For instance...where I live voting records are public information (party affiliation). We ALWAYS check party affiliation before hiring any staff - medical, office, business. Simply, we use the information we have at hand to NOT hire any one affiliated with the incorrect party. To that, we are in a right to work state (FL) so, if your not listed and show the wrong colors - we have the right to dismiss anyone for any reason (right down to, I dont like that Biden pin on your daughters purse).
@@nas191 not long ago I caught a minor story but an App was straight up sold entirely. So its not really 'sharing with 3rd parties' rather the entire thing was sold and owned by a new party. It was some Chinese 'romance game' (tencent? not sure who) and some Russian company bought it. There was the complaints about withdrawals even where people had long since canceled any auto-payments etc.
Your data is only as safe as the weakest link. You can take all these precautions, and then your bank can one of hundreds of banks, government agencies, businesses, and universities hacked in the zero-day MOVEit Transfer vulnerability attack last May, where hackers got bank account numbers, Social Security numbers, full names, birthdates, email addresses, phone numbers, and residential addresses, and likely other info, of millions of people around the world, the extent of which is not fully known even now.
Naomi Brockwell is the best.
These two videos confirm all my government suspicions regarding cell phone apps
A big problem in educating people on privacy is they already assume the government is omnipotent. The joke that "everyone has an FBI agent assigned to them" leads them to think they have already lost this freedom, so they value it less.
I am always amazed how much leniency there is for the government to break the law and the constitution. If there is a particular issue that is so incredibly important to make it a constitutional right, then there should be a push to make an amendment, not excuse corruption.
The US and Canadian governments both wipe their respective asses with our constitutions whenever they feel like it.
Maybe you being amazed is why they keep getting away with it. JFK ring a bell?
Let's look at a conspiracy theory real quick... The FBI wanted to spy on American citizens for years before 9-11 but the Supreme Court kept denying them... Then 9-11 happens and what gets passed shortly after... The patriot act which allows the FBI to spy on US citizens that they deem necessary for security reasons without court approval... I'm not agreeing with or disagreeing with this theory... I'm just throwing it out there...
WAY to late, most people don't care about their freedoms, yeah if they are all gone and then it to late, like now, most cops hate the US Constitution, and they love to break them, and the government hate them, and yes the cops work for the government, and not you.
Big brother not only alive and well, but thriving on your information. If you're for big government you're against freedom.
" Anything you say can and will be used against you"
Stop commiting crimes
Who else just deleted apps on their devices?
Big Brother is always watching.
In countries with armed citizens, the government doesn't have a monopoly on force. You don't have to be helpless.
So I’m paying taxes for my government to buy my info from a corporation? Why didn’t the government ask and pay me directly?
And this is when they follow the law. Imagine what information they collect illegally.
Abortion didn't become illegal, it merely went to the States to determine. Also it doesn't make the woman wanting the abortion criminals. The criminality lies at the doctors feet.
Exactly! I get the point she was trying to make, but the analogy was just lazy and inaccurate.
Thank you. She probably isn't lying as much as she is just ignorantly parroting pro-death talking points.
There is no place in America where a woman is violating any law by getting an abortion. Only providers can be charged and this is still uncommon among our states.
Not the point.
So glad someone is willing to point this out.
She was arguing against it when it was actually in support of her argument. Just goes to show how the media influences you even when you think you're aware. Talk about irony.
Most people break at least one minor law every day. If they want you in jail, you are done. Privacy matters!!!!!
Just another step towards our collapse
NBTV is the BEST! Privacy is not easy to maintain.
I once thought about purple shampoo, never said the words ‘I need purple shampoo’ and suddenly I was getting ads for them everywhere. It’s terrifying.
I don't need to know why the government wants my information. The fact that it does is troublesome enough.
So any attorneys willing to take on a CLASS ACTION LAWSUIT against our Federal Government ? Where do we send our retainers?
Naomi is 100% accurate and it should be illegal for companies to obtain any information more than is absolutely necessary regardless what the customer agrees to in extremely tiny fine print or massive ambigious Terms of Service such as Tik Tok...
But, you did agree......
@@systemsbroken We've had court cases about this before and judges usually hold up that violating a ToS is not a crime. They are not considered binding agreements under the law per the 9th circuit federal court of appeals.
Who determines what is "absolutely necessary"?
Who determines Terms of Service?
How do you think the data a corporation has can be used against you, and why should it ever want to do so?
Do you truly believe that those fields are completely free and unregulated?
@@JhiinTraxxTo control and manipulate the masses because they don’t care. Why do some commit heinous acts against others? Sometimes we have no idea what the reason is, if there is a reason we’ll ever understand but unfortunately not all folks in power are saints.
its called the patriot act my friend. you dont even have to agree for them to take your info, they just do
She has a great channel to introduce regular folks to privacy.
One of my biggest issues is all the spam email I keep getting, spam texts, spam, spam, spam! They keep changing how they send it so the filters don't catch them.
NSA doesn't buy data as everything runs through them, they do however use big tech to help manage all the endless information
Scary but true. Big Brother is watching (& listening)
Abortion has always been illegal. Killing a pregnant woman is considered a double homicide in the US.
Convenience and comfort are the reason this country is in decline. We all want push button everything while we are comfortably snuggled in our homes or vehicles. Screw the government.
If they're looking at what you're doing. They can remote control your devices.
I was really scared about how the government use to buy my personal data and my personal privacy. I don't want the government crushes my personal freedom and my personal choices, also this is very important as an Indonesian people like me. Thank you John and Naomi for sharing this 👍👍👍
Unfortunately, when the government _doesn't_ have that data about you, these days that's *more* incriminating than if they do.
It's absolutely criminal this only has 11k likes with 850K+ views.
They should both be. Way way higher. Keep em coming John. One of my fav no nonsense channels on the tube.
Don't worry we are watching our corrupt government also
. 9467 : I always record police
Nice to see more people recognizing the NSA's mass surveillance, feels like it's almost been forgotten in recent times.
its not that people forgot, its more that people stopped caring for some strange reason
@nefariouspersephone9447 Americans will give up freedom for convenience every time. Most are cowards as well.
As someone from Utah I'm embarrassed that we have that government data storage facility.
She's so right!
Well done once again Mr. Stossel! Yes, we have to decide what we are willing to allow for the sake of convenience. She mankes some really good points.
Plus we're all agreeing to "Terms and Conditions" that we never read, yet it's basically signing a contract. Anything could be in there.
It is not like signing a contract. The US Federal Court of Appeals has ruled that TOS can not be legally enforced. There is no legal consequence from breaking it, you can consider it more like agreeing what rule set to use for a casual game. This is why we have a giant game of cat and mouse between ad companies and people who use adblock for instance.
They are listening via your phone/tablets. I was discussing with my wife about putting Christmas lights on the front yard tress and the next day Google sent me a video of how to do it. I never asked google to send me anything.
I've been trying to convince my loved ones of this for a few years now... this is scary.
I wish that I could just talk to whoever has the data that targets ads to me, because they are not doing a good job of it. I see so many annoying Medicare plan ads, and I am over a decade away from being old enough to be eligible for Medicare. They also aren't going to sell me on a new roof or better insulation for my house, no matter how many ads I see, because I rent an apartment.
It just means that you’ve done a good job at hiding some of your information… and keeping a lot of it private.
I would be proud you’re getting random ads….
So American People vote like your life depended on it!!!
When they update your phone, they automatically turn on features and locators without your permission or permissions buried deep in the user agreement.
My favorite journalist! ⚡️⚡️👏👏
I first learned all of this 12 years ago. It's been a frustrating ride.
I think the days of privacy are already behind us. I do agree, people are concerned in general about privacy and data collection. But they also seem unwilling to give up the perks as well.
...sounds like a business opportunity to me. Just sayin'.
"Days of privacy" is fantasy than never existed. 200 years ago people wrote letters on paper. To talk to someone you need physically meet to that someone, so no remote communication. And so on. That's why all "rights" movements never asked for privacy - it was never a thing. Welcome to planet Earth.
I think that it is too late for adults, but it should still be early enough for the kids and those who aren't conceived yet.
It’s never too late. We could always change law and make it illegal for corporations to collect that data.
but the perks existed nefore the govt spying did. Im not sure if this point makes sensem
My coworkers and I tested this. I didnt have an sudoku games on my phone. We had a conversation about sudoku, sure as shit, facebook started advertising sudoku games, google did too, youtube even. My phone was asleep... i didnt have any apps even open
I don't like putting my life on my phone. But the world forces us to do more and more on it.
Finding the real stories. You’re the quintessential reporter, Mr. Stossel
The "price" we all pay to use all of these so-called free apps is our privacy. And we're all guilty of paying that price. They use the data we freely give them for targeted, personalized ads. It's how they generate revenue. But who knows who THEY give or sell that data to? That's the crux of her argument.
Even things you pay for will still do it. Pay just means you bet a slightly better product, but they still scam and exploit you.
As the poster above already said. Paid apps do it.
For Christ sakes, WINDOWS now does it.
There's services across all industries that people pay for and they do the same.
Your ISP.
Your TV and it's "smart" crap installed on it. If your display is connected to the Internet. All these TV's are sending everything you watch off to somewhere.
If the software isn't open source and vetted by people, you don't know much about what it's actually doing. Yes you can block things and monitor network activities on your own network and get an idea of what these things are up to.
Again. Look at your damn TV. These things or at least their remotes almost have microphones in them. Look at your Internet activity with these things powered on and connected to it internet.
See the never ending pings back to their servers. The ad network hits and so on. Don't even do anything with the TV. Just turn it on and let it sit on the home screen.
If you aren't the paying customer, then you are the product for sale.
yep, we're doing it right now commenting on these videos
Cell phones are still 'new' to me at 65 and the ONLY reason I carry one is they succeeded by removing public phones. The plan continues . . . .
"Suddenly overnight abortion becomes illegal"? When did that happen?
I have not forgotten how they traced anyone on January 6. who was in the area of the Capital, or associated with anyone who could be remotely tied to the protest...
I keep trying to explain this to my wife and children, and anyone else I speak to you online who seemed to defend the practice of data collection. Even in video gaming, they are collecting extraordinary amounts of data on games that you have purchased. It's in literally everything
The rationalization is ALWAYS 'So what, the government doesn't care about me, only the bad guys', and what is even worse is people that vote for these kind of regimes, 'to insure' their personal safety. As Benjamin Franklin, among his many quotes, the most applicable, para-phrased, was about rigid central government (Monarchy in his day) vs. a republic, a Republic will work as long as the people defends or "keeps it". Seems like most don't care as long as their personal wants are satisfied, that is all that is important.
@@paulholmes672 a lot of the problem is coming from the younger Generations who have come up in the last 20 years where it's been pretty horrible to live in america, and they know nothing other than government control and pampering. Think about it the kids who have grown up since Obama was in office, the government has been nothing but overbearing. They don't know what Freedom looks like and can only take our word for it
@@paulholmes672part of the problem with many people today is that they haven’t experienced what it’s like to have their rights violated. Many Americans are too cushy in their lifestyles. If they’ve learned more about the history of tyranny, they may think twice.
There are reasons for that hard drive to spin while gaming, and when it gets going for 'no reason' well, I'm always tempted to just unplug the internet, often.
Not in my PS2 and typewriter
No one needs to know what color underwear I prefer, especially the government. Sadly, all the technology that we enjoy is collecting our information and what's to prevent the government from also using that information? George Orwell was right, but I don't think he wanted his novel, "Nineteen Eighty-four" to be a how-to guide.
The key here is to not care and turn towards the winds of change. It's happening, we know it, they know we know it, now it is all about how we want it all to go, then doing something.
I want them to watch me and keep track. Easier to shop, easier to watch things I like. I have nothing hide. IDGAF
I love how stossel acts like he is acting like he is curious about the the questions when he is really just trying to just how stupid so many Americans are. Keep up the work
The cellphone is a sophisticated reconnaissance device. I do consider whether I "need" an app, and what privileges I allow it. I appreciate the ability to do things like allow location sensing one time only by request and so forth. I don't use the phone for social media, and rarely allow access to the camera or mic. Basically, I trust apps as little as possible, and I keep in mind that phones are easy to hack.
After years of PC usage and all the 'fun' that comes with it, imagine my thoughts when they started handing out these microcomputers with virtually no security on them . . . .
i knew when internet was a new thing that thing called "privacy" was done and i never ever have had a personal tracking device. never will
This is one where I really don't care what they know. It's mundane stuff that doesn't identify anything of value.
The world needs more people like Stossel
Your “choice to opt out” of terms of service are akin to keeping your job within the jab during “COVID”!
Everyone is spying and collecting data and yet google maps is giving me the wrong directions because they don’t know you can’t turn left there, and giving me ads for stuff I hate.
I don’t expect the McDonald’s app to scan my face when all I wanted it to do was scan the QR code on my drink. We’re already in the dystopia
The government is also forcing me to pay taxes. How about we deal with that before we worry about what WE are handing over to our government WILLINGLY.
It's worse but also less achievable. We might be able to do something about the data - getting rid of taxation is currently a veeeeery long shot.
If there are no taxes then what will pay for the services you use like highways, infrastructure like sewage water, police, libraries, National Defense? How will you pay for any of these things without taxes
Oh they have enough money to keep that going. Right now I'm paying for Billions of dollars to be sent overseas by our government. When I could use that payment to finally get a new car to drive on these roads lol. @@Juggernaut-fg2up
Reduce tax by 75% and make it fair, a consumption tax, that's it
@@Juggernaut-fg2upAnd subsidize EV's, send unaccountable money to $kraine and granting 500k to transgender Pakistani children. Sure there's more we missed
They assume wrong. Their targeted advertising is worse than random advertising.
Thanks for staying true to your purpose..providing info to keep us aware. Much respect.
I've never given an app permission to use my microphone but I know 100% that they are listening when I get ads for things my wife and I were just talking about.
People have been ignoring Edward Snowden for a decade, while the gov't makes him out to be a traitor. The guy is an American hero....in constant persecution. None of this is new. People ARE that stupid.