Jan. 12th, 2011

winterbadger: (badgerwarning)
I've seen several people frantically posting the latest viral goofiness on Facebook, and instead of stamping on it every single place, I'm just going to post here, once.

People are getting wound up and frantic about the fact that a website, spokeo.com, is selling personal data. The viral message tells everyone to HURRY, HURRY, go to the Spokeo website and opt out of their evul sellin' yur infoz plan!

Now, it's great that Spokeo has given people an opt-out option (assuming that it actually works--has anyone verified that it does?)

But the issue is not that Spokeo is selling this data. It's that YOU are giving it to them! All the data they have is available to them for free on the Internet or is estimated by them based on other available data.

If you want people to stop reselling information *you* provide to the world, publicly, for free--STOP PROVIDING IT!

But, I would suggest, a more rational response would be to STOP FREAKING OUT. Yes, data aggregators exist. Most of us on the Internet use them all the time--by using services that either give us information they've gained from others (have you *never* looked at goods suggested to you by some variation of "people who bought X also bought Y" really? never? have you never used Yelp or Angie's List or Trip Advisor to check reviews?) or providing us with services that are informed and refined by customer usage data. Horrified that people can see your street address? Really? You don't have a telephone, and you never receive mail, then? Shocked that people know your gender, or your favourite ice cream flavour, or where you went to university? Then why did you fill out that quiz that told anyone who uses it those things?

If you seriously want to take your personal info out of the hands of resellers, don't worry about Spokeo; there are dozens, probably hundreds more companies just like it; are you going to go to all their websites? Act at the source--stop posting information you don't want the world to know on the single greatest worldwide communication system in the history of humanity. (As for the stuff you've already posted, well, too late. :-) Data on the Internet is like plastic shopping bags--it sticks around forever.)

But maybe, just maybe, re-examine your mindless terror at people knowing basic information about you. Because if you really want to be invisible, you need to do much, much more than nuke your Facebook or Blogger account. You have to stop earning money, paying taxes, owning property, driving a car, participating in political and civic and professional organizations... and much more. All of those actions generate publicly available data about you. Information that anyone can access.

Think about why you think this is such a terrifying thing.

Then take a deep, deep breath and chill the heck out.
winterbadger: (referee)
The Maryland Soccer Referees website says that

At every recertification clinic, the USSF Recertification exam will be administered. This exam consists of 100 questions, multiple choice and true/false. You will also be required to list the 10 penal fouls, the 8 technical infractions, the 8 cautionable offenses (and 3 cautions allowed for sustitutes), as well as the 7 send-off offenses.

Since to the best of my knowledge* there are only 7 cautionable offenses, I am curious to see how this works out.


*And I did just check the 2010/2011 Laws of the Game...

Profile

winterbadger: (Default)
winterbadger

March 2024

S M T W T F S
     12
34567 89
10111213141516
17181920212223
24252627282930
31      

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Aug. 13th, 2025 11:08 pm
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios