The
Federal
Trade
Commission
published
a
new
report
about
the
data
collection
policies
of
social
media
platforms
and
video
streaming
services,
and
the
results
are
damning,
if
not
unexpected.
The
report,
which
was
released
on
September
19th,
found
that
these
platforms
not
only
surveil
consumers
but
often
retain
vast
troves
of
data
indefinitely
about
users
and
non-users
alike
—
and
suggests
they
can’t
be
trusted
to
regulate
themselves.
Given
the
billions
of
dollars
companies
stand
to
earn
from
collecting
and
monetizing
user
data,
“self-regulation
has
been
a
failure,”
the
report
says.
“Predicting,
shaping,
and
monetizing
human
behavior
through
commercial
surveillance
is
extremely
profitable
—
it’s
made
these
companies
some
of
the
most
valuable
on
the
planet
—
and
putting
industry
in
charge
has
had
predictable
results.”
The
problem,
the
report
finds,
lies
not
with
one
particular
company’s
business
model
but
with
industrywide
incentive
structures
that
reward
harvesting,
collecting,
and
monetizing
user
data. “While
lucrative
for
the
companies,
these
surveillance
practices
can
endanger
people’s
privacy,
threaten
their
freedoms,
and
expose
them
to
a
host
of
harms”
like
identity
theft
and
stalking,”
FTC
Chair
Lina
Khan
said.
“Several
firms’
failure
to
adequately
protect
kids
and
teens
online
is
especially
troubling.”
The
report
is
based
on
questions
the
FTC
sent
to
nine
companies
in
December
2020
under
section
6(b)
of
the
FTC
Act,
which
lets
the
commission
conduct
studies
without
a
specific
law
enforcement
purpose.
The
orders
were
sent
to
Amazon
(which
owns
Twitch),
Facebook,
YouTube,
Twitter,
X,
Snap,
ByteDance
(owner
of
TikTok),
Discord,
Reddit,
and
WhatsApp
and
focused
on
these
companies’
data
collection
and
retention
practices
as
well
as
how
these
practices
affect
children
and
teenagers.
Among
the
findings
in
the
129-page
report
is
the
fact
that
even
people
who
don’t
use
these
platforms
had
their
data
collected.
The
companies
acquired
consumer
data
from
a
variety
of
sources,
including
advertisers
and
data
brokers,
advertising
tracking
technology,
and
inferences
from
algorithms,
data
analytics,
or
artificial
intelligence.
Companies
can
retain
this
data
indefinitely,
the
report
found
—
and
some
didn’t
delete
users’
data
in
response
to
deletion
requests.
Instead,
some
companies
deidentified
data
rather
than
deleting
it,
while
others
would
only
delete
some
data.
The
report
ends
with
recommendations
to
curb
these
practices,
which
the
document
says
are
incentivized
by
the
companies’
business
models.
The
FTC
encourages
Congress
to
pass
comprehensive
privacy
legislation
to
limit
surveillance.
In
the
interim,
the
commission
suggests
that
companies
limit
their
own
data
collection
policies,
stop
using
“privacy-intensive
ad
tracking
technologies,”
and
implement
greater
privacy
protections
for
teenagers.
Original author: Gaby Del Valle
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