Tech Provides Easy Access to Finances and Entertainment. Why Not Your Data?

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Technology has allowed consumers to go to physical banks less frequently because they can access all their assets and investments easily online. It has made Blockbuster obsolete and spared them trips to the local movie theater because thousands of TV programs, films, and podcasts are available on the screens in their pockets and living rooms. Why, then, has technology not made it possible for consumers to access what so many companies have gotten rich by taking from consumers: our data?

We know that from the minute we pick up our phones in the morning, dozens of companies collect data on our behavior. Google and Facebook collect information to share with advertisers, who then use personal details such as our interests and identities to sell us goods running the gamut from home insurance to hair care products. Amazon leverages data to sell and develop its own goods. A vast range of companies track us even when we never directly visit their websites. 

Why shouldn’t you be able to find out how many companies store information about you and what they know? Better yet, why shouldn’t you be able to tell them whether you want them to collect, share, or make money off your data? And why shouldn’t it be easy to take control of your data, which is your property, in much the same way you use technology to access and manage your finances?

If you can place trades for tens of thousands of dollars in securities in seconds on a smartphone, you should be able to access your data. The truth is that the tech industry has not gotten there yet because it has been in the interest of massive corporations to hide what they know about you. But access to your data is possible, and it’s on the way — if you want it.

The industry wisens up

Silicon Valley conglomerates and legislators are waking up to the reality that the status quo of data-driven business is not going to fly for much longer. Governments are passing legislation and influential companies are creating new policies to increase consumer control over our data.

Europe passed a data privacy law in 2018 that places limits on how companies collect and share consumer data. California passed a ballot resolution last year strengthening previous privacy legislation and empowering consumers to demand that companies stop selling their data. Virginia passed its own data privacy law earlier this year, and more state actions are sure to follow.

On the private side, Google said it would stop allowing companies to track you across the Web even when you’re not using their products, and Apple recently started forcing companies to get explicit consumer consent before tracking them on the iPhone. Of course, there was immediate pushback to these changes. Advertising technology firms said Google’s changes would mark the end of the open and free Internet, and Facebook went into war mode, claiming Apple’s changes would be the death of small business.

The corporate resistance to even partial incursions against digital tracking without consumer consent should tell us just how valuable our data is.

Existing privacy reforms are not enough

Politicians and industrial titans alike will tout recent data privacy reforms, but these are small steps toward remedying a massive problem. 

The fact remains: In a time of unparalleled economic convenience fueled by consumer technology, there is no place for consumers to holistically and efficiently access, manage, and take back control of their data. 

A patchwork of public and private solutions is better than nothing, but it does not go nearly far enough toward giving consumers the access we need to be in true control of our data. There is no reason we should be unable to access and manage our data as easily as we manage our online bank accounts.

We need a data privacy movement

As consumers, we have to say enough is enough when it comes to the unscrupulous pillaging of our data. Billionaires have been walking into our homes and waltzing out with thousands of dollars per year in jewels; it’s time to take back the keys to the family safe.

Data privacy company Reklaim blows past incremental reforms giving consumers partial access to their data. We are building a single destination where you can see your data, edit it, say no to Big Tech, tell companies what you’ll allow them to record about you, verify your identity in order to log in safely to various services, and even earn your share of the massive profits that businesses have been making off your data for decades.

We are not calling for the end of data-driven business, nor selling the fantasy that consumers will or should simply give up convenient and engaging products by Google, Facebook, and Amazon. We are ushering in a democratized, transparent, consumer-centric digital economy where the consumer decides who gets their data, has the power to say which information about their lives is off limits, and can access a piece of the profits. 

Consumers do not want to be tracked in everything they do online; that is why just 5% of them have opted into apps following them all over the Web since Apple gave them the choice to cut off cross-site and cross-app tracking. But until recently, there had been no destination for consumers to achieve the access they clearly want. At Reklaim, we are providing that access and, along with it, the opportunity to transform a near-universal desire for data access into universal action. Come take back what’s yours.

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