The privacy issue is a problem for a lot of people. I see it differently.
I recently joined the Delete Facebook movement, but not because I thought removing my account would restore my online privacy.
I was ready to move on.
The truth is, the Internet knows the same about me today as it did when I was a member of the world’s largest social network. Whether or not I deleted my account is irrelevant to the state of my online privacy. There will still be a “Reg Harnish” shadow profile on the platform with thousands of pages of data. My profile will continue to grow as long as my friends and family continue to post photos and information about me — and as long as Facebook follows its practice of monitoring user behavior across the Internet via partner sites and ads.
My digital footprint isn’t going anywhere. That is, unless I decide to drop off the grid for the rest of my life; but, even then, my information still would be available, just buried beneath a sea of data.
The privacy issue is a problem for a lot of people. I see it differently. In fact, I believe society could benefit from a little less privacy. I’m certainly not advocating for the death of privacy. I tend to side with those who argue that privacy is an intrinsic value that shouldn’t be treated as a dispensable commodity. It is essential for self-development and, without some level of privacy, we would all lose our individuality and conform to one another.
With that said, here are four benefits of a world with less privacy:
Convenience: For the past 3,000 years, cultures commonly prioritized convenience and wealth over privacy. Internal walls in homes didn’t exist until 1500 A.D., with the development of the brick chimney, which needed support beams that ultimately segmented the home’s interior space. Before the 1700s, most homes had only one bed because they were too expensive to build.
Even today, just about every American has already unwittingly opted out of privacy for the convenience of surfing the web, monitoring their physical activity with fitness trackers, or receiving digital discounts at the grocery store, among many other online activities.
By devoting so much of our time online or opting in to terms and conditions, we have allowed third-parties not only to create digital copies of ourselves but also to predict our behaviors before we, ourselves, even know how we will behave. Taken to the next level, we could experience a new degree of convenience that rivals some of the best sci-fi films ever created. Already we are experiencing a degree of high-tech convenience that our forefathers could scarcely have imagined. Plus, with the recent push toward artificial intelligence and machine learning, computers may learn to guide us toward better decisions for our health, relationships, and lifestyles.
Reduced cybercrime: The simple fact that we place value on our privacy makes it worth stealing. For instance, Social Security numbers (SSNs) were never meant to be more than a way for tracking the earnings histories of workers in the US. Nowadays, you can’t do anything without providing that number for verification. What was once a worthless nine-digit number now can be used to open a bank account in someone else’s name, receive their benefits, and ultimately steal their identity.
The minute we stop using our SSNs as a form of ID, criminals would no longer be interested in stealing that information because it would be worthless. The same goes for all information. Of course, some degree of privacy is essential for maintaining national security and financial stability. But that doesn’t mean we should be assigning false value to outdated forms of identification. Just like our SSNs, if other information such as corporate databases, National Security Agency (NSA) records, and the security cameras that monitor our city streets were made public, criminals would be less likely to steal it because that information would be worthless on the market.
Live longer: Tailored advertisements and discounts showing up on your social feeds are just a couple of the many benefits of sharing personal information. Pulling back the curtain of privacy could save lives, too. Right now, our medical data is protected by the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA), but many people don’t realize that their health data could be the missing link preventing the next big breakthrough in medicine. If we shared our medical data freely, imagine the amount of data that medical providers, entrepreneurs, and companies could harness in the name of research. New medical treatments and cures would be discovered, perhaps, at unprecedented rates, not only saving lives but allowing humans to live longer.
Take the deadly drug Vioxx, for example. Researchers reported in a 2013 Iowa Law Review article that if patients who took the deadly drug had shared their health information publicly, statistics could have detected the side effects much earlier, possibly saving as many as 25,000 lives.
Source Link: https://www.darkreading.com/endpoint/4-benefits-of-a-world-with-less-privacy/a/d-id/1332690
Author: Reg Harnish