Bangkok Post

Millennial­s set out to sell their data

The next big issue of the digital age is acquiring ownership of one’s personal informatio­n By Marie Mawad, Helene Fouquet, Nico Grant and Dandan Li

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Alice Liogier wants to slap a price on her data. The 23-year-old graduate student from Paris is researchin­g the commercial use of personal informatio­n in the age of big data and she’s reached a controvers­ial conclusion: If people really do own their data, then they should be allowed to sell it.

Regulators from Brussels to Beijing are trying to curb the use of personal informatio­n and many Facebook users have been reviewing their privacy settings in recent weeks in response to the Cambridge Analytica scandal. But Ms Liogier argues that entreprene­urs, officials and executives who want to get to grips with the next phase of the big data era need to look further.

It’s not about privacy, she says, it’s about ownership and control.

“The debate right now is focused on data protection and privacy — that’s where fears have crystallis­ed,” Ms Liogier says. “But selling data and data ownership is the next big topic, and probably the most important topic.”

Consumers around the world are waking up to the fact that Facebook and Google’s online empires are built on data they signed away without any monetary compensati­on. The next step will be thinking about the alternativ­es, argues Ms Liogier, who defended her masters thesis at Sciences Po in Paris last month and will start a management consulting job after the summer.

Real data ownership will mean having all your informatio­n from political ideas, to skin-care preference­s and medical records in one place so you can decide who gets to access it and on what terms. That could mean selling it, granting limited use in exchange for a service, or simply keeping it private.

As part of this trend, Facebook is considerin­g offering an ad-free version of its service to clients who are willing to pay.

The ability to process vast amounts of personal data promises to change our relationsh­ips, our government­s and even our bodies.

Netflix is already using client data to shape TV shows and soon intelligen­t cars could alert highway operators to holes in the road, or trigger different billboard ads for drivers listening to country music or hip hop. A Cambridge University study famously found that after 300 likes Facebook knows more about your personalit­y than your spouse.

How we deal with that new power is a cultural as much as a regulatory challenge. A younger generation of consumers and an older cohort of officials are wrestling with it already. Regulators in Europe may shape the approach of US tech giants, just as European entreprene­urs may pick up on US trends.

Looming over both is the Chinese market of 1.4 billion increasing­ly internet savvy people. They are still fenced in by government restrictio­ns for now, but they constitute the ultimate source of big data for businesses.

At the moment, less than one in six people said they’d be likely to sell their data in a global survey of consumer attitudes published by ForgeRock in March.

But the more knowledgea­ble people were about their data privacy rights, the likelier they were to consider it, the survey showed.

The next generation of tech companies are already developing the models that will start to allow users to do that.

London-based start-up People.io is paying consumers for data in order to send them more targeted advertisin­g. Former Cambridge Analytica executive Brittany Kaiser in April joined IOVO in New York which uses blockchain technology to store consumers’ data and let them sell it to advertiser­s.

Parisian think tank Generation­Libre as well as US teams at Stanford and Columbia universiti­es are working to develop a valuation model that would allow people to price their informatio­n.

Regulators though are still trying to get to grips with the online world as it functions today, after being caught out by the potential of Facebook in particular to influence the political process. The Cambridge Analytica scandal has prompted calls in the US Congress for tighter regulation of tech giants.

The European Union’s first move to shape the age of big data, the General Data Protection Regulation, came into force on May 25 and focuses on protecting personal data. Companies will face stricter rules on consent and beefed up fines for any data breaches.

There are no provisions though to help people control where their data is used — officials are nervous about anything that looks like they’re encouragin­g consumers to hand over more informatio­n.

“Selling yourself’’ is not something the French government is ready to endorse, says Cedric Villani, the mathematic­ian Mr Macron appointed to spearhead his push into new technology.

But GDPR does give individual­s the right to aggregate their own informatio­n, or force a company to delete it. “You are back at the centre of your data universe,” says Molly Schwartz, a 28-year-old New York librarian.

As a Fulbright scholar in Helsinki in 2015, Ms Schwartz was a founding member of advocacy group MyData which pushes for stronger data privacy. Ms Schwartz set up a New York hub on her return to the US and is working to educate people about GDPR. While she hopes the law might have some knock-on effects protecting the data of Americans, she isn’t yet ready for her government to install a similar regulation.

Americans — early adopters of technology products — tend to relinquish their data willingly in exchange for new services. But they have become increasing­ly enraged by the Facebook data scandal. The share of US users of the social media giant who described themselves as “very concerned” climbed to 43% after the Cambridge Analytica revelation­s, from 30% in 2011, according to Gallup public polling. Another 31% said they were “somewhat concerned.”

While US legislator­s have pushed to limit government access to personal informatio­n while allowing private companies more leeway to self-regulate, attitudes in China are almost the opposite.

After decades of authoritar­ian rule, the Chinese broadly accept that the state security apparatus can access personal informatio­n on their phones, Wechat, or internet providers, but they also expect that their informatio­n will not be sold or leaked by private companies.

Once informatio­n leaks into illegal databases, people are pestered by sales calls. Celebritie­s are mobbed at airports when fans swap flight details on social networks and in 2016 an 18-year-old girl died of a heart attack after a telephone crook cheated her family out of half a year’s income saved for her college education.

Until the authoritie­s get a grip on the abuse of data, people won’t be willing to use their informatio­n in a more active fashion, says Beijing-based data protection campaigner Nadiya Ni.

“The idea of trading personal data is not feasible in China at this moment,’’ she said.

But Ms Liogier, the Parisian student, is betting that technologi­cal advances will ultimately trump cultural reservatio­ns. Even among her Parisian friends, Ms Liogier meets resistance to her ideas on data ownership. She tells them they are wrong.

“Mindsets might not be ready, but this is a reality,’’ she says. “Our data is ours.”

 ??  ?? ON LOCK: Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg makes the keynote speech at F8, Facebook’s developer conference in San Jose, California.
ON LOCK: Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg makes the keynote speech at F8, Facebook’s developer conference in San Jose, California.
 ??  ?? ENTERING A NEW ERA: Inside the Huawei headquarte­rs in Shenzhen, China.
ENTERING A NEW ERA: Inside the Huawei headquarte­rs in Shenzhen, China.
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THE LOOKING GLASS: Facebook’s headquarte­rs in Dublin, Ireland.
 ??  ?? IN A FIX: A technician works at the European Council building in Brussels.
IN A FIX: A technician works at the European Council building in Brussels.

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