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    What does Google know about you

    You may know that Google is tracking you, but most people don't realize the extent of it. Luckily, there are simple steps you can take to dramatically reduce Google's tracking.

    ,When you search on Google, they keep your search history forever. That means they know every search you’ve ever done on Google. That alone is pretty scary, but it’s just the shallow end of the very deep pool of data

    that they try to collect on people.

    What most people don’t realize is that even if you don’t use any Google products directly, they’re still trying to discover as much as they can about you. Google trackers have been found on 75% of the top million websites. This means they're also trying to track most everywhere you go on the internet, trying to slurp up your browsing history!

    Most people also don’t know that Google runs most of the ads you see across the internet and in apps – you know those ones that follow you around everywhere? Yup, that’s Google, too. They aren’t really a search company anymore – they’re a tracking company. They are tracking as much as they can for these annoying and intrusive ads, including recording every time you see them, where you saw them, if you clicked on them, etc.

    But even that’s not all…

    If You Use Google Products

    If you do use Google products, they track you even more. In addition to tracking everything you’ve ever searched for on Google (e.g. “weird rash”), Google also tracks every video you’ve ever watched on YouTube. Many people actually don’t know that Google owns YouTube

    ; now you know.

    And if you use Android (yeah, Google owns that too), then Google is also usually tracking:

    Every place you’ve been via Google Location Services.
    How often you use your apps, when you use them, where you use them, and who you use them to interact with. (This is just excessive by any measure.)
    All of your text messages, which unlike on iOS, are not encrypted by default

    .
    Your photos (even in some cases the ones you’ve deleted)

    .

    If you use Gmail, they of course also have all your emails and contacts. If you use Google Calendar, they know schedule. There’s a pattern here: For all Google products (Hangouts, Music, Drive, etc.), you can expect the same level of tracking; that is, pretty much anything they can track, they will.

    Oh, and if you use Google Home, they also store a live recording of every command you (or anyone else) has ever said to your device! Yes, you heard that right (err… they heard it) – you can check out all the recordings on your Google activity page


    .

    You Become the Product

    Why does Google want all of your information anyway? Simple: as stated, Google isn’t a search company anymore, they’re a tracking company. All of these data points allow Google to build a pretty robust profile about you. In some ways, by keeping such close tabs on everything you do, they may know you better than you know yourself!

    The result of all that tracking is that Google uses your personal profile to sell ads, not only on their search engine, but also on over three million other websites and apps. Every time you visit one of these sites or apps, Google is following you around with hyper-targeted ads, trying to influence your behavior.

    It’s exploitative. By allowing Google to collect all this info, you are allowing hundreds of thousands of advertisers to bid on serving you ads based on your sensitive personal data. Everyone involved is profiting from your information, except you. You are the product.



    The Myth of “Nothing to Hide”

    Some may argue that they have “nothing to hide,” so they are not concerned with the amount of information Google has collected and stored on them, but that argument is fundamentally flawed for many reasons

    .

    Everyone has information they want to keep private: Do you close the door when you go to the bathroom, or cover your windows when it gets dark? Privacy is about control over our personal information. We don’t want it in the hands of everyone, and certainly don’t want people profiting on it without our consent or participation.

    In addition, privacy is essential to ********ic institutions like voting and everyday situations such as getting medical care and performing financial transactions. Without it, there can be significant harms.

    On an individual level, lack of privacy leads to putting people into a filter bubble
    , getting manipulated by ads, discrimination, fraud, and identity theft. On a societal level, it can lead to deepened polarization and societal manipulation as we’ve unfortunately been seeing multiply in recent years.

    What you think about this?

    #2
    Originally posted by Marcello View Post
    You may know that Google is tracking you, but most people don't realize the extent of it. Luckily, there are simple steps you can take to dramatically reduce Google's tracking.

    ,When you search on Google, they keep your search history forever. That means they know every search you’ve ever done on Google. That alone is pretty scary, but it’s just the shallow end of the very deep pool of data

    that they try to collect on people.

    What most people don’t realize is that even if you don’t use any Google products directly, they’re still trying to discover as much as they can about you. Google trackers have been found on 75% of the top million websites. This means they're also trying to track most everywhere you go on the internet, trying to slurp up your browsing history!

    Most people also don’t know that Google runs most of the ads you see across the internet and in apps – you know those ones that follow you around everywhere? Yup, that’s Google, too. They aren’t really a search company anymore – they’re a tracking company. They are tracking as much as they can for these annoying and intrusive ads, including recording every time you see them, where you saw them, if you clicked on them, etc.

    But even that’s not all…

    If You Use Google Products

    If you do use Google products, they track you even more. In addition to tracking everything you’ve ever searched for on Google (e.g. “weird rash”), Google also tracks every video you’ve ever watched on YouTube. Many people actually don’t know that Google owns YouTube

    ; now you know.

    And if you use Android (yeah, Google owns that too), then Google is also usually tracking:

    Every place you’ve been via Google Location Services.
    How often you use your apps, when you use them, where you use them, and who you use them to interact with. (This is just excessive by any measure.)
    All of your text messages, which unlike on iOS, are not encrypted by default

    .
    Your photos (even in some cases the ones you’ve deleted)

    .

    If you use Gmail, they of course also have all your emails and contacts. If you use Google Calendar, they know schedule. There’s a pattern here: For all Google products (Hangouts, Music, Drive, etc.), you can expect the same level of tracking; that is, pretty much anything they can track, they will.

    Oh, and if you use Google Home, they also store a live recording of every command you (or anyone else) has ever said to your device! Yes, you heard that right (err… they heard it) – you can check out all the recordings on your Google activity page


    .

    You Become the Product

    Why does Google want all of your information anyway? Simple: as stated, Google isn’t a search company anymore, they’re a tracking company. All of these data points allow Google to build a pretty robust profile about you. In some ways, by keeping such close tabs on everything you do, they may know you better than you know yourself!

    The result of all that tracking is that Google uses your personal profile to sell ads, not only on their search engine, but also on over three million other websites and apps. Every time you visit one of these sites or apps, Google is following you around with hyper-targeted ads, trying to influence your behavior.

    It’s exploitative. By allowing Google to collect all this info, you are allowing hundreds of thousands of advertisers to bid on serving you ads based on your sensitive personal data. Everyone involved is profiting from your information, except you. You are the product.



    The Myth of “Nothing to Hide”

    Some may argue that they have “nothing to hide,” so they are not concerned with the amount of information Google has collected and stored on them, but that argument is fundamentally flawed for many reasons

    .

    Everyone has information they want to keep private: Do you close the door when you go to the bathroom, or cover your windows when it gets dark? Privacy is about control over our personal information. We don’t want it in the hands of everyone, and certainly don’t want people profiting on it without our consent or participation.

    In addition, privacy is essential to ********ic institutions like voting and everyday situations such as getting medical care and performing financial transactions. Without it, there can be significant harms.

    On an individual level, lack of privacy leads to putting people into a filter bubble
    , getting manipulated by ads, discrimination, fraud, and identity theft. On a societal level, it can lead to deepened polarization and societal manipulation as we’ve unfortunately been seeing multiply in recent years.

    What you think about this?






    1) all true

    2) informed people have been warning the world for YEARS

    3) FACT: those informed people were labeled wackjobs/conspiracy nuts by smart-asses who are not as clever as they think they are

    4) the smartasses referred to above, are far more dangerous than google... their naivety/******ity is an enabler, one that will drag the rest of us down with them

    Comment


      #3
      True story.



      One time my ex and I were just talking, chilling on the couch not on our phones or anything.




      Stoned, talking about the government and ****, we get to talking about that novel by George Orwell 1984.





      All of a sudden Google pops up like "1984 is a novel by George Orwell"




      We kind of just eat there looking at each other like

      Comment


        #4
        Smart TV's, smart phones, make us look ****** as they watch.

        Comment


          #5
          espionage since early millennia...

          wars were won due to spying...

          harmonic spying. just like ''Touch ID,'' there are fundamentals+harmonics to effectively predict particular words from voice recognition, all from analog - land lines.

          then came metadata. the concept to collect signature tracks or data from computers. not just software, but peripheral technologies like hard drives. you'd be surprised that even an old crime, like a homicide case, where someone threw away a laptop because of insecurities for evidence, old data from that drive dumped in a river can still be salvaged! that was all the 90s... with some forensic science cases... such awareness inspired fiction, films, shows. CSI...

          patriot act concept wanted to enforce, go further, not just state defenses, but benefit capitalist and world markets

          Sept. 11 2001.. done.

          commercialized forms of ''spying'' reinvented itself with social media. metadata continues. still, capitalist profit from these from all known industries..

          5G... follow the narratives and its potential..

          Comment


            #6
            Originally posted by titanium View Post
            Smart TV's, smart phones, make us look ****** as they watch.
            much of the western world been learning from the Asian markets...

            Many smart TVs have built-in cameras that use facial recognition to make programming suggestions based on who's watching or for live, two-way conversations on a large screen. These intuitive TVs also respond to voice commands "for those of us who are too lazy to actually pick up the remote," the FBI says.Dec 2, 2019

            There are four Samsung Smart TV series, 11 models total, that have built-in mics and HD cameras: The plasma 8000 series with three models, a 7500 LED LCD series with three models, an 8000 LED LCD series with four models and the flagship 9000 LED LCD, which currently has one model.Dec 13, 2012

            Comment


              #7
              What's new? We've been under control for decades now, and we'll always be. Privacy does not exist anymore, and it's not from now. Why, according to you, Windows 10 was delivered for free?

              Comment


                #8
                Originally posted by Tatabanya View Post
                What's new? We've been under control for decades now, and we'll always be. Privacy does not exist anymore, and it's not from now. Why, according to you, Windows 10 was delivered for free?
                OSX been free too...

                Comment


                  #9
                  Originally posted by Uncle Al..varez View Post
                  OSX been free too...
                  Exactly. No one is innocent, in 2020, and - especially - no one is really free to do what he/she wants without someone else reporting it somewhere.

                  At this point, it's probably better playing their game openly. You want my data? Take it, no problem. I'll simply choose alternative products until I realize that they're also controlled to the extent of annoying me. And if I want to tell a friend about private family issues via Gmail, I'll do it regardless of their knowing of my personal shìt or not. In any case, they do...

                  Also, I constantly switch between three or four different browsers, clean up my cache always, and use all types of ad blocker. It won't save me from having my data collected, but at the very least it helps in not having a bazillion pop-ups per minute as I'm surfing.

                  Anyhow, let's face it: in terms of privacy defense we're currently as safe as Jorge Castro vs John David Jackson. Against the ropes, bloodied and battered. And I doubt that we regular folks will find a Hail Mary shot to knock the establishment out.
                  Last edited by Tatabanya; 04-09-2020, 07:06 AM.

                  Comment


                    #10
                    Originally posted by Beercules View Post
                    True story.



                    One time my ex and I were just talking, chilling on the couch not on our phones or anything.




                    Stoned, talking about the government and ****, we get to talking about that novel by George Orwell 1984.





                    All of a sudden Google pops up like "1984 is a novel by George Orwell"




                    We kind of just eat there looking at each other like

                    That's weird enough, but the fact that the book was 1984 makes it even more strange.

                    Big brother is watching you, bro! With his hand down his pants.

                    Comment

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