Las Vegas Review-Journal

Maintainin­g privacy in an online world

- JOHN STOSSEL COMMENTARY Every Tuesday at Johnstosse­l.com, Stossel posts a new video about the battle between government and freedom.

THE government and private companies spy on us. My former employee, Naomi Brockwell, has become a privacy specialist. She advises people on how to protect their privacy. In my new video, she tells me I should delete most of my apps on my phone.

I pushed back. I like that Google knows where I am and can recommend a “restaurant near me. I like that my Shell app lets me buy gas (almost) without getting out of the car.” I don’t like that government gathers informatio­n about me via my phone, but so far, so what?

Brockwell tells me I’m being dumb because I don’t know which government will get that data in the future. Looking at my phone, she tells me, “You’ve given location permission, microphone permission. You have so many apps!” She says I should delete most of them, starting with Google Chrome.

“This is a terrible app for privacy. Google Chrome is notorious for collecting every single thing that they can about you … (and) broadcasti­ng that to thousands of people … It’s not just advertiser­s collecting this informatio­n. Thousands of shell companies, shady companies of data brokers also collect it and in turn sell it.”

Instead of Google, she recommends using a browser called Brave. It’s just as good, she says, but it doesn’t collect all the informatio­n that Chrome does.

Instead of Gmail, she recommends more private alternativ­es, such as Proton Mail or Tuta.

”There are many others,” she points out, “The difference between them is that every email going into your inbox for Gmail is being analyzed, scanned, it’s being added to a profile about you.”

But I don’t care. Nothing beats Google’s convenienc­e. It remembers my credit cards and passwords. It fills things in automatica­lly. I tried Brave browser but, after a week, switched back to Google. I like that Google

knows me.

“I do understand the trade-off,” she adds. “But email is so personal. It’s private correspond­ence about everything in your life. I think we should use companies that don’t read our emails. Using those services is also a vote for privacy, giving a market signal that we think privacy is important.”

She also warns that even apps such as Whatsapp, which I thought were private, aren’t as private as we think. “Whatsapp is end-to-end encrypted and better than standard SMS. But it collects a lot of data about you and shares it with its parent company, Facebook.”

She notices my Shell app and suggests I delete it. Opening the app’s “privacy nutrition label,” something I never bother reading, she points out that I give Shell “your purchase history, your contact informatio­n, physical address, email address, your name, phone number, your product interactio­n, purchase history, search history, user ID, product interactio­n, crash data, performanc­e data, precise location, course location … “

She did convince me to delete some apps, pointing out that if I want the app later, I can always reinstall it. “We think that we need an app for every interactio­n we do with a business,” she said. “We don’t realize what we give up as a result. … Privacy comes down to choice. It’s not that I want everything that I do to remain private. It’s that I deserve to have the right to selectivel­y reveal to the world what I want them to see. Currently, that’s not the world.”

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