INSIDER Spring 2019 | Page 16

Insider Media and Technology Who’s watching us? Ever wondered where your information goes, who has access to it and what it is being used for? Is anything really kept pri- vate anymore? Should we be concerned? Olivia Larkin Social media, the internet and mobile phones present benefits and pitfalls. Today so much of our modern lives is lived, recorded, registered, saved on online devices or platforms. Our generation will happily set up our personal profiles, accept cookies, reveal our friendship group, our achievements and our most embarrassing moments for that matter on Facebook, Snapchat, Instagram and so on, but do we really under- stand who has access to our data and for what pur- pose they might use it? How many times in the last few years have we heard stories about email ac- counts being hacked? Does anyone remember that 145 million Americans had their data accessed when US credit ratings agency Equifax was hacked? Not a small number, that. We store so much sensitive data with so many different companies online – ad- dresses, dates of birth, credit card numbers etc and that is only the more obvi- ous stuff. What’s more we think nothing of it and will quite happily register on a new, previously untested website. What do we really know of the site’s security systems and what have we given consent to? In truth, we know very little and we forego our concerns because we have become accustomed to operat- ing this way and moreover, we like the convenience. A few decades back one par- ticular branch of marketing focused on demographic pro- filing. At this time, in a pre- internet world, best guesses were made about people’s habits based on their post- codes and projections made on their earnings or lifestyle based on the relative affluence of the area. Marketeers pitched to a stereotype not a specific individual. Now that has all changed as we readily hand “The time has come to recog- nise that privacy is just an il- lusion” - Andreas Weigend over details about our- selves by placing aspects of our life online for all to see. It is now possible for companies to build very strong profiles of us by our activity and then to target us accordingly. I still find myself surprised by how advertisements on certain websites adjust to show me pictures of items I may have been considering purchasing a few moments ago. Simp- ly put, we have all grown to accept that aspects of our browsing history are tracked and utilised. Companies The College magazine online: sixthformmag.blogspot.co.uk can make