Jim Ross: Every day, data collectors learn more about us than we suspect
A few years ago I walked into a store operated by the world's largest retailer, and there displayed prominently was a slow cooker that could be turned on remotely over the internet. My first thought was, "I wonder who monitors how often we use that thing, and when."
It's no secret that the more we are connected, the less privacy we have. Everything we do on the internet is monitored and sold. According to the New York Times, if you own a car made by
"Automakers Are Sharing Consumers' Driving Behavior With Insurance Companies," published
The article describes what happened when Dahl read the report: "What it contained stunned him: more than 130 pages detailing each time he or his wife had driven the Bolt over the previous six months. It included the dates of 640 trips, their start and end times, the distance driven and an accounting of any speeding, hard braking or sharp accelerations. The only thing it didn't have is where they had driven the car."
It turns out that devices you can have installed in your car to (supposedly) help you be a better driver can also be used to track your driving habits. The same is true with apps. According to the
You might unknowingly allow such surveillance when you sign up for some services. Permission could be buried in the fine print of your sales contract.
Most of us don't know just how much of our lives are being monitored. The thing with the slow cooker has had me wondering how much data collectors know about me and what points of entry I have given them into my life.
It's a given that if I go online to look for photos of a 1981
There are some things I will buy with my debit card, and there are some things I won't. The data collectors probably will figure out what those other things are, but I want to make it more difficult for them.
As for cars, I've often thought they're getting too complicated anyway. I'm so old, I remember when a steering wheel was for steering and for honking a horn. Not counting the horn, the steering wheel of my wife's car has 17 buttons. I have no idea what some of them are for. My best guess is they have something to do with the multitude of electronic warning devices and gizmos that can make driving safer, but after reading the article in the
There are days when I yearn for a simpler vehicle. If you can drive a car from the 1980s or maybe a basic version from the early 1990s, you'll see how much cars have changed and how they've given data collectors more access to how you drive.
With a modern vehicle, there's no such thing as getting away by yourself for a while. Big Brother tags along.
So if you think I wonder how much Big Data spies on people like you and me, let's say I figure they already know more about me than I do. I picked up on this years and years ago when I did an article about the introduction of the
At least when I read a print newspaper, no one knows what articles I read and how I do on the Sudoku that day. I'll take these small victories when I can get them.



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