As we already know, the technology to handle the “Big Data” is already here, or at least – it’s getting there. The business potential is HUGE. Today, we are going to play “devils advocate”, and talk about the “other, darker” side to big data. A side that is very easily overlooked, in the Big Data craze, which is sweeping the Internet and IT industry.
When we go online,
we start leaving behind data, and this is where the Big Data technology comes
in. As we read our e-mails, surf our
social networks, read articles, blog, share photos, shop online, and basically
– click away our day, we are like Henzel and Gretel, “leaving behind
breadcrumbs of information” – as Gary Kovacs – CEO of Mozilla Corporation
stated in a Ted Talk that was published
earlier this week. Mr. Kovacs talked
about the vast amount of information, which is being collected about each one
of us. With every click of the mouse, more websites begin to follow us, only a
small fraction of them being websites we actually visit, and the number of the
websites following us grow exponentially as our day wears on and we expand our
internet based activities.
Let’s compare this
to a “real” world situation. In most
countries, lawyer solicitation is illegal.
If one were to get injured in a car accident, and the day after being
released from the hospital, a lawyer would call him offering him legal
representation, normally our response would be: “how did he get my number, did
the hospital give it to him?” In the
real world we do not fail to see the extreme invasion of privacy and the in-adherence
to a certain moral code – and in the real world, in most countries, such a
lawyer would actually get disbarred for taking such action.
Now let us conduct a
small experiment – go into your Gmail account, and draft an email to
yourself. Title the e-mail “car accident”, and in the body of the mail
type in the sentence “I was involved in a
car accident”. Now this varies from one user to another, but we are willing
to bet that when reading the self-sent mail, you will see on the right hand
side of your screen, ads promoting different aspects of the automotive
industry, in our case, we got mostly ads for car repair services. 6-7 years ago we all thought this was pretty
cool, well it doesn’t seem so cool now…
And again we would like to ask, why is this behavior, which is so
intolerable in the “real” world, so accepted in the virtual space?
But surfing habit
tracking is only a small part of it. As
businesses utilize Big Data tools more and more to analyze market behavior, and
aid their human counterparts in making pricing decisions, more ethical issues
are addressed. Derrick Harris gives the example
of landlords utilizing Big Data analysis in order to analyze rental market behavior
and maximize rental prices and profit, while totally disregarding the human
side of the equation.
Now don’t get us
wrong, we love Big Data! We think its business and social implications are
huge, and as we mentioned in the beginning of this post, we are only playing
“devils advocate”, giving you something to think about over the weekend.
See you next week…
Very hard to read the small print and white over black makes the eyes go all fuzzy, I just couldn't read through all of it sorry.
ReplyDeleteThank you for the input - text size has been increased
ReplyDeleteConfused. Why or rather, how can the author point out the obvious invasion of privacy along with the contradiction that the public seems inconsistently tolerant of online stalking (tracking it a watered down euphemism) but not so in real life and then say they don't just like Big Data, they "love Big Data"
ReplyDeleteWhat is to like? This is akin to being wire tapped and horrifying.
We need to get some laws in play and ban online behavior stalking IMMEDIATELY! Before all our privacy & freedom are taken away.
Did you know that Mesothelioma is one of the highest cost adwords on Google. http://www.cwire.org/2006/03/23/updated-highest-paying-adsense-keywords/ and it's very interesting why.
ReplyDeleteAnd here is something to add to your horror: http://www.forbes.com/sites/kashmirhill/2012/02/16/how-target-figured-out-a-teen-girl-was-pregnant-before-her-father-did/