Next time when an app prompts you to use your location data at all times you may want to decline as it turns out a $12 billion market is built on selling location data to the highest bidder, reports The Next Web.
There are the data aggregators that collect the data from multiple applications and sell in bulk. And then there are analytics companies which buy data either from aggregators or from applications and perform the analytics. And everybody sells to everybody else…
There’s only so much you can squeeze into the notification message. You get one line, right? So you can’t say all of that in the notification message. You only get to explain to the user, ‘I need your location data for X, Y, and Z.’ What you have to do is, there has to be a link to the privacy policy.
We couldn’t agree more and yet the location analytics horse is out of the barn and Big Data companies like Oracle or Amazon trade in such services which makes it even harder to scrutinize and regulate. Most location data is, of course, used for legitimate business consultancy and ad targeting purposes, as per Mr Tsounis again:
For example, we know that the average income in this neighborhood by census data is $50,000. But then there are two devices—one went to Dollar General, McDonald’s, and Walmart, and the other went to a BMW dealer and Tiffany’s … so they probably make more money.
- All 10 surveyed data brokers openly and explicitly advertise data on millions of U.S. individuals, oftentimes advertising thousands or tens of thousands of sub-attributes on each of those individuals, ranging from demographic information to personal activities and life preferences (e.g., politics, travel, banking, healthcare, consumer goods and services)
- People-search websites aggregate public records on individuals and make it possible for anyone to search for major activist figures, senior military personnel, and other individuals – uncovering home address, phone number, and other information as well as the names of known family members and relatives
- Oracle has a data partner that openly and explicitly advertises data on U.S. individuals’ interest in political organizations, figures, and causes, including but not limited to data on those who support the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), Planned Parenthood, the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), and the National LGBTQ Task Force
- Oracle, Epsilon, and other data brokers openly and explicitly advertise data sharing platforms to which anywhere from dozens to thousands of companies contribute data on individuals
- Multiple data brokers advertise the ability to locate individuals, ranging from the use of driver license records and other aggregated data to pinpointing phone geolocations
- Three major U.S. data brokers, Acxiom, LexisNexis, and Nielsen, openly and explicitly advertise data on current or former U.S. military personnel; LexisNexis advertises a capability to search an individual and identify whether they are active-duty military; and other brokers likely sweep up military personnel in their larger data sets.
Once a bunch of unsavory apps were gone from the official app stores, they sometimes crawl back in via their SDK kits, and this cat and mouse game can only be avoided with tighter personal data privacy regulations akin to what Europe is doing, even if not perfect.