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Paying not to be Spied On

Generali
Posts: 36,411 Forumite

https://www.schneier.com/blog/archives/2015/02/att_charging_cu.html
https://gigaom.com/2015/02/19/dont-let-att-mislead-you-about-its-29-privacy-fee/
Your ISP is in a unique position when it comes to your websurfing habits. They know pretty much everything you do: illegal downloads, who you bank with, the 'one-handed websites' you visit. AT&T have traditionally sold that information on to 3rd party advertisers who can in turn then try to sell you whatever depraved filth it is that you are into. (I bet they're not the only ones - TalkTalk used to do it).
Anyhoo, now AT&T have an offer: pay an extra $44-66 and they will (probably) stop harvesting your data! Lovely.
https://gigaom.com/2015/02/19/dont-let-att-mislead-you-about-its-29-privacy-fee/
Your ISP is in a unique position when it comes to your websurfing habits. They know pretty much everything you do: illegal downloads, who you bank with, the 'one-handed websites' you visit. AT&T have traditionally sold that information on to 3rd party advertisers who can in turn then try to sell you whatever depraved filth it is that you are into. (I bet they're not the only ones - TalkTalk used to do it).
Anyhoo, now AT&T have an offer: pay an extra $44-66 and they will (probably) stop harvesting your data! Lovely.
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Comments
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Is this relevant to the UK?0
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I think the fat belly adverts will follow me around no matter what I do/pay0
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https://www.schneier.com/blog/archives/2015/02/att_charging_cu.html
https://gigaom.com/2015/02/19/dont-let-att-mislead-you-about-its-29-privacy-fee/
Your ISP is in a unique position when it comes to your websurfing habits. They know pretty much everything you do: illegal downloads, who you bank with, the 'one-handed websites' you visit. AT&T have traditionally sold that information on to 3rd party advertisers who can in turn then try to sell you whatever depraved filth it is that you are into. (I bet they're not the only ones - TalkTalk used to do it).
Anyhoo, now AT&T have an offer: pay an extra $44-66 and they will (probably) stop harvesting your data! Lovely.
I don't do it myself but can't you use a proxy website like the kids do in China ?Proudly voted remain. A global union of countries is the only way to commit global capital to the rule of law.0 -
I don't do it myself but can't you use a proxy website like the kids do in China ?
Presumably it all still goes through the ISP as someone has to connect you to the interwebs one way or another. The only way to get around it would be to send information that was already encrypted.0 -
Or use a VPN. Or if even that's too much trouble get Tor browser.Faith, hope, charity, these three; but the greatest of these is charity.0
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If I was a spy the first people I'd spy on would be those who had paid a fee not to be spied on.0
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I find these spies very irritating.
It ruined my Christmas the other year. Mrs LM bought me some new bar stools, not realising that because she bought them on the Internet, just about every Internet page loaded on any of the 4 computers in the house, have little adverts showing the very same bar stools.....
Any respectable member of society like yours' truly would never use 'one-handed websites' [Gen's euphemism] anyway. But if I did. an advert for such a site would be on Mrs LM's computer before you could say "Mine's a large one...."
I thought Norton Internet Security was supposed to protect me from these things but they don't. They probably get a commission. Shady tactics are not a stranger to Norton either. When my annual subscription is close to renewal, I get a noticeably high number of 'Attack' messages [obviously sent by Norton] with very visible messages congratulating Norton for saving me. Their other tactic is to encourage me strongly to press their "Renew" button for another year, to charge some rip-off amount.
I can buy a brand new subscription from Amazon for half what Norton want, after which, ironically, all my computers advertise Norton Internet Security all over the place.
At least UK is not like China. Over there, if I wanted to do Internet banking (on a UK site) then I would have to attempt to load the page when I got home from work (say 8 p.m.). After dinner, perhaps at 10 p.m., the page would load, having been in the very long queue for the 30,000 Chinese Internet Police.0
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