Cybercitizens
use sites on the Internet as resources that offer them services with scant
thought as to how their data and activity information could be used by site
owners and others who have access to it. The others are entities who are
sold this information, cyber criminals who steal it, third parties who provide
services to the site owners and also innocuous users who come across this data
because the sites privacy protection or in some cases security is not adequate.
Cybercitizens
should note that many sites provide services for free, supported by
advertisement revenue. These sites collect and analyze profile and activity
information which includes clicks, page visits, and transaction information to
selectively display advertisements suited to the user’s demographic profile or
searches. This helps advertisers obtain better returns on their advertisement
dollar. Most of the larger and more popular sites make their users sign up to lengthy
terms and conditions, which few read or understand, to enable them use personal
data. Larger more established sites lay out well worded privacy statements on
their websites which users can read. In all cases, information related to
financial transactions are normally governed by strict regulations and
compliances which regulates use and specifies standards for the security of
card data.
But, there are
many other firms with questionable credentials and whose ownership remain
largely unknown. They may be popular sites too, but on the vast global highway,
there is no way that one can truly ascertain where your data resides, who sees
it and what use it is put too. The case
of the hack of the extramarital affair dating site Ashley Madison, clearly
demonstrates the vulnerability of those users to reputational damage, blackmail
and extortion. There are many sites, whose membership if disclosed could hurt
the reputations of millions of people. Pornographic sites for instance.
The trail of
personal data that one puts online remains. For example, curious users of the
Ashley Madison site would have no way of proving to their spouse that they
subscribed to the site out of curiosity and not for intended use.
The effect of
disclosure of personal data varies from tarnished reputation and financial
losses to minor privacy intrusions. Cybercitizens should evaluate these risks
and their potential consequences when they use certain sites.
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