Let’s concentrate on just one sort of information that you produce and is unquestionably unique and personal to you: your photo. Imagine taking a selfie with your iPhone and sending it to your partner through email. Your spouse then uses her phone to upload the picture and the photo to her social network page. You knowingly authorize international internet websites to store and process them by uploading them with intent to do so.

    Source: Solix Technologies
    For users (the data principal), uploading and sharing images is a common, everyday activity. The use, storage, processing, privacy protection, and safeguarding of this data are all things that governments throughout the world are trying to hold technology corporations (data fiduciaries) accountable for. To oversee the flow of data, they establish data protection boards and designate data protection officers. 
    However, this seems unattainable and idealistic given the massive data upload rate of 3 billion photographs every day and the internet traffic data flow of around 80 terabytes per second. But let’s not discredit knowledgeable international legislators by relying solely on statistics. Let’s go into the specifics of how the industry operates and how regulation is rendered difficult.
    The 1990s saw the beginning of the internet, but the necessary money was not available. Large sums of money were required by the early settlers, but neither the government nor private investors were ready to provide them. Only advertisers, who wished to promote things through celebrity endorsement, were willing to invest money. A decade later, social media emerged, allowing users to freely share details of their private lives, establish themselves as influencers, and make money online. 

    Source: Study IQ IAS
    Internet users preferred ease to privacy. At every step, you may instantaneously book an Uber, send a gift, buy a dress, and socialize with pals without getting permission. So, as netizens chose self-promotion over caution and privacy, privacy was tossed to the wind. Both the public and the technological industry were content.
    What do you think about this? Comment below.

    Share.

    Comments are closed.