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COMMUNITY The Juneteenth Lounge


"Do you ever feel like you’re being watched? Like no matter where you go, what you do, there’s a corporation tracking it to sell the data to someone else? Well, according to a New York Times report, you’re right: Even the apps on your phone are tracking the way you drive, just to sell it to your insurer.

Insurers have long wanted to track individual drivers to discern their habits, in hopes of finding reasons to raise rates. They’ve tried OBD dongles and their own smartphone apps, but now those companies are trying a new tactic: Buying data from the apps you actually want to have on your phone. From the New York Times:


This isn’t anonymized, aggregate data. Arity, the data broker, is more than happy to supply insurers with individual scores for individual people — showing companies exactly how you drive.

Arity is an Allstate brand, so not all competitors use its data, but the data is being collected nonetheless. GasBuddy, Life360, and MyRadar are spying on you regardless of the insurance logo on your bill every month. Selling subscriptions to your app is good, but selling your customers as a product to a third party is apparently even better.
Your car may well already be tracking your driving to sell to insurers, but this new vector applies even to drivers without fancy modern data-insecure vehicles. All you need is to own a cell phone — which, of course, the insurers are already tracking in other ways. Privacy is overrated anyway, right?"
It's kind of crazy how they're allowed to share and sell our info and you need to do extra stuff to opt out
 

"Do you ever feel like you’re being watched? Like no matter where you go, what you do, there’s a corporation tracking it to sell the data to someone else? Well, according to a New York Times report, you’re right: Even the apps on your phone are tracking the way you drive, just to sell it to your insurer.

Insurers have long wanted to track individual drivers to discern their habits, in hopes of finding reasons to raise rates. They’ve tried OBD dongles and their own smartphone apps, but now those companies are trying a new tactic: Buying data from the apps you actually want to have on your phone. From the New York Times:


This isn’t anonymized, aggregate data. Arity, the data broker, is more than happy to supply insurers with individual scores for individual people — showing companies exactly how you drive.

Arity is an Allstate brand, so not all competitors use its data, but the data is being collected nonetheless. GasBuddy, Life360, and MyRadar are spying on you regardless of the insurance logo on your bill every month. Selling subscriptions to your app is good, but selling your customers as a product to a third party is apparently even better.
Your car may well already be tracking your driving to sell to insurers, but this new vector applies even to drivers without fancy modern data-insecure vehicles. All you need is to own a cell phone — which, of course, the insurers are already tracking in other ways. Privacy is overrated anyway, right?"

People don't understand that the convenience that they desperately crave comes with reduction of freedom beyond what they can fathom and the cost is their attention.

Everything tracks everything.

And they will price you out with the data they collect and tune their services to the rich and wealthy because they know your wages won't increase anytime soon because they set the wages.
 
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