<aside> 🚧 Privacy vs. Security

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Inspecting of the entrance to the - court is safe is a security but the others can see what you got and it destroy your privacy. Regulations / limitations

We feeding panopticon with our data we are monitored constantly credit cards internet cameras, telephones cars shop cards loyalty cards Al can analyze own political view and sexual orientation can know more about us the we about ourselves

Media vs. different chanel’s of comminication - media not private info

<aside> 🔑 Pseudonymization. vs. Anonimization (you cannot restore the original information)

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Pseudonymization and anonymization of personal data

Privacy and our personal date

We feeding "panopticon" with our data, we are monitored constantly

How our date is collected: Web sites we visit (cookies) / phones / social media / search engines / smart assistants (Amazon Echo, Google Assistant) credit cards, online shopping, geolocation (GoogleMap) streaming platforms, TINDER, UBER

What internet can say about Us?

What google knows about us https://www.rene-pickhardt.de/google-uses-57-signals-to-filter/

Log in into the google and check it out:

https://myactivity.google.com/myactivityhttps://adssettings.google.com/authenticatedhttps://www.google.com/maps/timeline?pb

digital shadow

Free service in return of your data

General Data Protection Regulation

more control over personal data

require companies to implement reasonable data protection measures to protect consumers’ personal data and privacy against loss or exposure.

Data breach notifications play a breach within 72 hours of learning of the breach and must provide specific details of the breach such as the nature of it

require companies to perform Data Protection Impact Assessments to identify risks to consumer data and Data Protection Compliance Reviews to ensure those risks are addressed.

requires that certain companies appoint data protection officers.

outline the data protection officer position and its responsibilities in ensuring GDPR compliance as well as reporting to Supervisory Authorities and data subjects.

extends data protection requirements to international companies that collect or process EU citizens’ personal data, subjecting them to the same requirements and penalties as EU-based companies.

outlines the penalties for GDPR non-compliance, which can be up to 4% of the violating company’s global annual revenue depending on the nature of the violation.

What do companies use your data for?

target you with personalized ads,

tailors online experiences for you,

tracks how you use websites, monitors the kind of products you spend time looking at, and helps brands try and sell more to you.

giving things like your age, location and email address away might seem like nothing to you, the info is everything to the brands who collect it.

companies such as Facebook, Uber, and Tinder are amongst those using over 50% of the data that it’s possible to get on you. That’s why they’re willing to pay for it because ultimately they hope it will pay them back.

The cookies and tracking tools that brands put on your computer are designed (in theory) to help you. By monitoring how you behave online, companies can tailor the experience to suit your needs.

Sociotechnic emotions / feelings. curiosity - greedy - fear - compassion

lost my pass help me please pendrive with selaries data / free gadgets /

using the celebrities to support con