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#1
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Exactly, this is why several communist countries have embraced digital currency. So you can be at their mercy. Nothing altruistic about it. Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
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#2
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Just as I don't want all these online companies to collect my personal information, I don't want government to know exactly how much money I have, where I have it, how I spend it, and etc.
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#3
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I'm starting to see a new front in the connection between advancing technology and resistance to it being wrapped up in grand control conspiracies with this whole "cashless" thing.
This is a free market business thing, not a government thing. This is the free market telling you that they don't want to deal with hours of sorting/transporting/storing dirty paper and heavy coins. This is businesses telling you to tap your card and move on, not hold up lines with making change or writing checks. This is literally businesses telling you what to do. This is literally businesses tapping your purchases to your name/card. This isn't a government control scheme. It's pure capitalism. 100% capitalism. In a previous life I worked for a data harvesting and mining operation. They knew a LOT about anyone, whether they had a "rewards card" or not. Many would be surprised how easy it is to gather information and how much of it has already been gathered. They use it to sell you things, not to elevate your importance to being a focus of a world-wide conspiracy. They use it to save themselves money on postage and time not sending you offers that aren't targeted, not to find some secret information to take your family down and enslave you. They notice you bought lumber, certain types of joists, and deck nails. Then they send you coupon for deck furniture a week later... We worked with Home Depot and Lowes maintaining their customer database. We worked with a crapton of other major corps. So yeah, resist if you feel like it, but the strong arm of capitalism wants your data to flow easier so they can get ahead of the curve to market to you. The US government doesn't give a flip that you're buying coffee at Starbucks. |
#4
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And then they get hacked and all that info ends up in the hands of people who use it to exploit. I have 3 rental homes. A year ago, within about 4 months of each other, two of them informed me the company they were using to service those mortgages had been hacked, and my data were exposed. When I applied for those mortgages, I had to submit much more than just my address, contact info, SSN, employer, but also my assets. In two ionstances, the companies I got my original mortgaghes with sold my loan to another mortgage company. In both cases, those new mortgaghe companies then farmed out the servicing of those mortgages to yet another party. Not to mention, my homestead mortgage. So, I figure at least 5 mortgage companies have very sensitive information on me, and at least twice, a vendor they did business with fumbled it into the hands of thieves. I have a master's degree in software engineering. I worked for years in the data warehouse dept. at Express Scripts, where we had, at one time, over a billion prescription claims records, along with referential data on the members, prescribers, pharmacies, drugs prescribed, and so on. I know something about data security, and I can tell you, between contractors working for us who had access, and older claim data we archived off our platforms to be stored with an outside vendor, it is nearly impossible to keep data completely secure. It isn't a boogy-man argument to say that the less personal and financial data we are forced to reveal, the better. |
#5
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Yes, I was a trusted employee, but I had direct access to client database(s) because we made the tools that mined that data. I could do anything and "cover" my tracks if needed. We've downloaded entire databases from clients (with permission) in order to locally sandbox huge rollouts. They trusted us to delete/destroy it afterwards. Though some back-end was universal, a chunk of it was custom to each client. Anyone's desire to not be tracked, data harvested, etc...that's fine. It's very hard, but it's a very logical thing to want, from personal privacy to the point that your data is actually valuable (to a point) and if you want to monetize it rather than strangers that's legit. I'm not saying not to worry about it or there's no risk, I'm just saying a lot of it is out there and it's businesses that badly want your data for themselves and to sell to others. Besides that aspect, so much of this is being pushed by businesses so employees don't have to have cash registers coming up short, keeping cash on hand, having people who need to count/store/transport cash...etc...it's a business decision to streamline. This kind of stuff works hand-in-hand with kiosks replacing humans when ordering stuff at fast food places, etc etc... |
#6
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But is what's good for companies and governments, good or bad, generally, for us? I use nextdoor to keep current with the goings on in my neighborhood. Lost pets, finding a local plumber or excavator, where to see fireworks on certain holidays... For the past year or so, I get a pop-up asking for my birthday including year. I can see how my approximate age might help them target ads at me, but why do they want my birthday? Last month I made an appointment for my annual physical. When I arrived at the receptionist desk, I told her my name and appointment time. She asked just one identifying question: May I have your birthday. |
#7
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Over the past few months, when I go into a small convenience store or McDonalds or small dinner. I'll go to pay for what I bought or ordered for a meal. The person at the register will ask do I want my change back ? Like what the hell ? Umm ya, I do. Is this the new normal ?
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