shuyung wrote:
I'm not sure how to respond to this.
Not, you understand, the activities of Congress, but your reactions to it.
I realize you are basically clueless, and I've known this for a long time, but it is always somewhat jarring to see it in living color, as it were.
I'm curious as to what information you think your providers are gathering on you, but only academically. I don't actually want you to put it in black and white, vomiting the ignorant cesspool that forms your worldly opinions onto my screen.
(Checking to make sure this is in Hellfire...okay, thank ghu)
Let me just reassure you of something. Your activities are trite, uninteresting, and completely without value.
I think I'll take this to the bank over the freakout.
Müs wrote:
ROFL at the dude that was bought for $300.
They're all **** whores.
Yes, I'm sure the logical conclusion from a $300 donation was "he was bought", not "this is a trivial donation that doesn't even enter into it."
TheRiov wrote:
except of course to marketers. There is big money in targeted advertising. Ask Google.
So.. there will be advertising on the internet as a result of this.
Talya wrote:
Google doesn't know jack **** about me to sell. Oh, they know my (variable) IP address. They know my search history, stuff about one of my email addresses, sure. but they don't have a **** clue who I am in order to associate that information. They have no credit cards. They have no addresses. I can get all of google's services without providing them with any of that. Everything they have is "meta." Google cannot positively identify my digital footprint with me in the physical world.
An ISP I'm paying for has my credit card, billing address, and all sorts of info that verifies who I actually am.
So, you're telling me that Google can make a self-driving car work, but can't figure out who you are from your metadata?
I wouldn't even be responding because I really don't know (yet), but I am pretty confident shuyung does know.
It seems the rules hadn't yet gone into effect yet anyhow.Quote:
The rules, which had not yet gone into effect, would have required Internet service providers to get your permission before collecting and sharing your data. The providers have data on your web browsing history, app usage and geo-location.
So in other words, this won't start anything new, it will just stop a restriction from going into effect.