INSIDER Spring 2019 | Page 17

Insider Media and Technology ever more accurate predic- tions on what motivates us, what we do, where we go and where we spend our money. For those of you with sports watches that record your steps, level of exercise, heartrate, even duration of sleep, are we sure we ever re- viewed the data agree- ments that accompanied the device when we first set it up? Such health and lifestyle data is in- credibly valuable to businesses. When the former Amazon chief scientist states categori- cally that ‘the time has come to recognise that privacy is just an illu- sion’, it is time for us all to take note. His point is that we create a data trail every day, it is happening every day, day in and day out, and we can’t stop it, short of going off grid and living in some remote wil- derness. Still not convinced that you have a data trail? A Ger- man investigative journal- ist wanted to show how easy it is to gain access to sensitive information on people in senior occupa- tions. She used a fake name, set up a fake compa- ny with its own website. Via companies that gather data about people’s inter- net usage, she was able to gain access to sensitive information from URL’s (Uniform Resource Loca- tors or web addresses to you and I) visited by 20 prominent people. What kind of data did she ac- cess? Well, someone’s com- plete financial records, the browsing history of some poli- ticians and the daily porn hab- its of a judge! What’s more shocking than that list, is that all of this data came from a ‘plug-in’ that the users had installed! A ‘plug-in’ is a soft- ware component that modifies an existing program. While collating this data was illegal, the company that sold it was based outside the EU and was never prosecuted. When the journalist. Svea Eckert, was asked what she thought of this experience, she compared it to the time ‘when people were not wearing seatbelts in cars’. “We are driven by the con- venience of modern life, even if it comes at a con- siderable price. ” change. Lobbying groups look to draw attention to what is happening and oblige governments to bring in stricter regula- tions and stronger penal- ties. The issue is most of us that are sharing our data every day on web- sites, devices and social media have essentially accepted that this is the way things are, that we don’t have a great level of privacy and we don’t even consider whether it is right or wrong. We are driven by the conven- ience of modern life, even if it comes at a considera- ble price. So, what does the future hold? Is our privacy gone forever? The only thing that seems to check the drive towards com- panies collecting more data is regulation and this has been brought about by lobbying for The College magazine online: sixthformmag.blogspot.co.uk