It’s no secret that companies collect information about you and sell it for advertising purposes. What is secret is the data that has been collected – you generally can’t see what data brokerages have on you, which means you don’t have a chance to pull data that you don’t want them to share. You also don’t have the option to correct mistakes. A member of the
FTC is proposing an initiate that will help you get a look at what these companies know about you: the good, the bad, and the just plain wrong.
FTC Commissioner Julie Brill announced the “
Reclaim Your Name” proposal at the 23rd Computers Freedom and Privacy Conference in Washington, D.C. yesterday. Brill points out that the wrong info could lead to discrimination or just misinformed decisions by the companies you interact with. If Brill’s plan is enacted, you’ll be able to view the policies of data brokerages and check out your own data so you can challenge bad information. Given that
data collection is inherently difficult to stop, pushing for transparency seems like an idea that could get some traction – particularly because it’s coming from the FTC.
Joshua Gulick
Josh cut his teeth (and hands) on his first PC upgrade in 2000 and was instantly hooked on all things tech. He took a degree in English and tech writing with him to
Computer Power User Magazine and spent years reviewing high-end workstations and gaming systems, processors, motherboards, memory and video cards. His enthusiasm for PC hardware also made him a natural fit for covering the burgeoning modding community, and he wrote
CPU’s “Mad Reader Mod” cover stories from the series’ inception until becoming the publication editor for
Smart Computing Magazine. A few years ago, he returned to his first love, reviewing smoking-hot PCs and components, for
HotHardware. When he’s not agonizing over benchmark scores, Josh is either running (very slowly) or spending time with family.