Thanks to the increasingly popular digital lifestyle trend, more data is shared online these days. That may be more convenient for sharing with friends and businesses, but it also means data is more vulnerable.
Perhaps the most conspicuous recent example of these security vulnerabilities comes in the form of Facebook’s latest data privacy breach. In late September the social network said “almost 50 million” of its users were exposed by a security flaw.
As long as you are careful though, you shouldn’t have to stop using social media channels or search engines completely just to regain control over your data. All you need are a few practical tips.
Believe it or not, approximately 90% of the data on the web was created since 2016, according to an IBM Marketing Cloud study. This is partly because businesses and new connectivity options have accelerated data production.
Yet, the proliferation of information is also attributable to consumers’ increasing willingness to share personal data. In exchange for giving up that personal data, they can access content, buy products and services, and share their opinions in surveys and on social media channels.
It’s this personal data availability that provides some incredible statistics about how data is produced and consumed on a daily basis. For example, The Next Web noted there were 1,209,600 new data-producing social media users each day. Plus, Domo noted that users upload over four million hours of content to YouTube every day.
With so much data being shared freely, many people still don’t realize the implications of providing personal information. One explosive article recently published in The Guardian illustrated just how much Google knows about each person who uses its products.
Is Google “Big Brother”? You can see just how closely Google has been tracking you by visiting this URL: https://www.google.com/maps/timeline?pb. Talking about a personal stalker! This link reveals a timeline of every place you have been while using Google on your mobile device.
Google also maintains an advertising profile for each user, tracking your searches, what you’ve deleted, what apps you regularly use, what’s in your Google docs, and what you’ve watched on YouTube.
And it’s not just Google. Facebook maintains similar information on each of its users.
The Facebook and Cambridge Analytica scandal uncovered how personal data was being collected, sold, and used. The truth came as a shock to most social media users. It illustrated the somewhat blind trust many users placed in social media sites. These users believed that their personal data would remain private. To be betrayed by the channel they trusted made many wonder how else their personal data was being used by other companies.
Tracking personal data has certainly provided benefits to many brands and by extension to their customers and prospects. Those benefits include better search results and product recommendations. However, most of us want to retain control over which companies can access and use our data. A Pew Research Center study found that 93% of those surveyed wanted to control who could access their personal information.
The desire to get this control back has yielded many potential solutions. In Europe, for example, this need was the impetus for the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR). Although similar regulation has yet to be established in the U.S., this legal framework sets a precedent that puts control over private data back in the hands of those who own it.
There are lots of ways users can achieve data privacy:
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