Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Care about digital privacy? Prove it

It’s time for us to take personal responsibi­lity for cyberspace conduct

- By Michael Strain

MILLIONS of people received an email from Twitter recently advising them to change their password. Apparently a bug allowed some employees inside the company to see users’ passwords in plain text, creating the possibilit­y that private informatio­n could be compromise­d.

I received this email, read it and promptly deleted it. I forgot all about it until the subject came up by chance in a conversati­on with a colleague the next day.

Why was I so blasé? Not because Twitter’s internal investigat­ion showed the informatio­n never left Twitter’s systems and found no indication of a breach or evidence of bad conduct — though that is all true. Instead, the economist in me — inferring my preference­s and beliefs from my conduct — concluded that I don’t really care whether someone has my Twitter password. Or, more precisely, that the cost — measured in time and hassle — of changing the password was greater than my expectatio­n of the harm from not doing so.

My behavior was at odds with important assumption­s in the public debate. The U.S. and Europe have been abuzz with discussion about privacy, driven in large part by the revelation that informatio­n from as many as 87 million Facebook users was sold to a private company. The question du jour: How can we protect informatio­n about ourselves that is on social media?

I’ve been asking a different question: Do we really care about privacy?

Consider whether you would trade the privacy of your friends for a free slice of pizza.

As part of an experiment­al study, economists Susan Athey, Christian Catalini and Catherine Tucker looked into the mismatch between stated preference­s about privacy and actual privacy-related behavior among undergradu­ate students at the Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology. Students were asked to provide the email addresses of their friends to the researcher­s. To entice them to do so, some were offered free pizza.

The researcher­s were interested in whether the students would protect the privacy of their friends by handing over invalid email addresses. (The economists were able to verify whether the addresses were valid.) It turns out that if you offer the students free pizza, the likelihood that they will protect the privacy of their friends is cut in half. Surprising­ly, this result was the same for students who reported high or low degrees of concern about protecting their privacy from businesses, the government and the public in general.

In addition to finding that small incentives to relinquish such data overpower stated preference­s about privacy, the economists also found that the students made quite different choices in response to small factors.

Indeed, despite all the headlines about Facebook’s use of individual data in recent weeks, the company reports that users haven’t been making significan­t changes to their privacy settings. Speaking last month in London shortly after Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg testified before Congress, a vice president with the company, Carolyn Everson, reported “not anticipati­ng major changes to our overall revenue and business model.”

I don’t consider anything on my Facebook page to be sensitive, private content. Judging by their behavior, it may be that most Facebook users feel the same.

That stands in contrast with the emails stored in my Gmail account, which have lots of private informatio­n that I wouldn’t want anyone other than my wife to read. To protect it, I have enabled “two-factor authentica­tion,” a protocol that requires me to provide informatio­n in addition to my username and password to access my account.

I doubt I’m alone in wanting my email account to stay private. Which is why I was surprised to learn that less than 10 percent of active Gmail accounts use this two-step process. It seems that for the overwhelmi­ng majority of Gmail users, the benefit of extra security isn’t worth the small cost of providing a bit of extra informatio­n at the login stage.

All this highlights the importance of personal responsibi­lity — a key part of the discussion about digital privacy that has been conspicuou­sly absent.

If you care about what’s in your email, take simple steps to protect it. Social-media platforms are in the public square. It’s the responsibi­lity of users to make sure there is nothing on their social-media accounts that shouldn’t be made public.

There is nuance here. I know not to put my bank account informatio­n on Twitter. But it may be less obvious that by using Google to help with online shopping or Facebook to stay in touch with friends, I am generating informatio­n that is in the public square and that private companies can use.

But that’s exactly what I’m doing, and it’s my responsibi­lity to make choices about my privacy knowing that.

At the end of the day, I’m happy to make this trade. And judging by your behavior, you probably are, too.

Michael Strain, director of economic policy studies and resident scholar at the American Enterprise Institute, is a Bloomberg opinion columnist.

 ?? Clay Jones Creators Syndicate ??
Clay Jones Creators Syndicate

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