Media outlets in the UK largely decried the "spamming by companies to get people to accept new terms and conditions", whereas in France, companies were portrayed as simply sending e-mails with privacy policies had been updated with attendant links to "learn more about it". Meanwhile, tech giants like Facebook and Google faced immediate legal filings -- essentially shots across their bows -- over perceptions of "forced consent".
Is it any wonder companies are still confused and thereby confusing their customers?
As GDPR goes into effect, the first phase of the Internet the Wild West Days come to an end, and it is the perfect back drop to discuss the power of disruption, with ALL of its positive and negative consequences.
At the root of all this, of course is the even braver new world of the future of our privacy in Europe, China, America, and elsewhere the new machines of the digital age reign. There is no question that the age of algorithms, automation and AI has resulted in great leaps forward for humanity in terms of personal recommendations, customised experiences and lightning-fast convenience.
All at the cost of sharing our personal information.
Today's digital age is the proverbial double-edged sword, and our privacy is increasingly the hilt of that blade. With every click and like and swipe we make online, our interests, preferences and intent are revealed and contained. The ubiquity of location-based sensors, facial recognition and social and mobile computing have made consumers subject to vast and lucrative analysis for companies every day. As The Police sang in the '80s, "every move you make" in the online world is visible to not only those we trust but also those we do not know even exist.
The Restoration of the Sovereignty of Data Privacy
Revelations like Cambridge Analytica's exploits -- without these users' direct consent have brought this under a white-hot heat lamp of scrutiny. Questions continue to be asked in Brussels, the House of Commons, and on Capitol Hill. After 25 years of regulatory-light experimentation with the "information superhighway," policy makers the world over are beginning to lay down serious "rules of the road" pertaining to data privacy, largely spurred by what EU has put in place the past few years as a policy pacesetter, culminating with GDPR.
If data is the new oil, the fervour every new massive breach or shocking revelation is a gusher that needs to be contained. And Like the Deepwater Horizon and Exxon Valdez did for the oil industry, regulation for the technology industry looms large. Regulating for privacy is a subplot to the great story of our time that is AI, but it runs the risk of necessarily side-tracking the excitement of possibilities in the digital age.
When it comes to bolstering privacy and trust in the Age of the Algorithm, here is how we begin the restoration. The following is a strategic list for all companies of six critical actions three things to start doing, and three things to stop doing to help data privacy flourish in the digital age.
Start:
Stop:
While the fundamentals of these questions have always been with us, the future now rests on how we treat and manage data. The long view of the future of privacy is that corporate leaders, companies and countries that do this successfully through ethics, responsible practices and, yes, healthy regulation like GDPR will participate in a new golden age of digital practice.