January 8, 2014
|
This article first appeared on Pando Daily.
“In
2012, the data broker industry generated 150 billion in revenue that’s
twice the size of the entire intelligence budget of the United States
government—all generated by the effort to detail and sell information
about our private lives.” — Senator Jay Rockefeller IV
“Quite
simply, in the digital age, data-driven marketing has become the fuel
on which America’s free market engine runs.” — Direct Marketing
Association
* *
Google
is very secretive about the exact nature of its for-profit intel
operation and how it uses the petabytes of data it collects on us every
single day for financial gain. Fortunately, though, we can get a sense
of the kind of info that Google and other Surveillance Valley megacorps
compile on us, and the ways in which that intel might be used and
abused, by looking at the business practices of the “data broker”
industry.
Thanks to a series of Senate hearings, the business of
data brokerage is finally being understood by consumers, but the
industry got its start back in the 1970s as a direct outgrowth of the
failure of telemarketing. In its early days, telemarketing had an
abysmal success rate: only 2 percent of people contacted would become
customers. In his book, “The Digital Perso,” Daniel J. Solove explains
what happened next:
To increase the low response rate,
marketers sought to sharpen their targeting techniques, which required
more consumer research and an effective way to collect, store, and
analyze information about consumers. The advent of the computer database
gave marketers this long sought-after ability — and it launched a
revolution in targeting technology.
Data brokers
rushed in to fill the void. These operations pulled in information from
any source they could get their hands on — voter registration, credit
card transactions, product warranty information, donations to political
campaigns and non-profits, court records — storing it in master
databases and then analyzing it in all sorts of ways that could be
useful to direct-mailing and telemarketing outfits. It wasn’t long
before data brokers realized that this information could be used beyond
telemarketing, and quickly evolved into a global for-profit intelligence
business that serves every conceivable data and intelligence need.
Today,
the industry churns somewhere around $150 billion in revenue annually.
There are up to 4,000 data broker companies — some of the biggest are
publicly traded — and together, they have detailed information on just
about every adult in the western world.
No source of information
is sacred: transaction records are bought in bulk from stores, retailers
and merchants; magazine subscriptions are recorded; food and restaurant
preferences are noted; public records and social networks are scoured
and scraped. What kind of prescription drugs did you buy? What kind of
books are you interested in? Are you a registered voter? To what
non-profits do you donate? What movies do you watch? Political
documentaries? Hunting reality TV shows?
That info is combined and
kept up to date with address, payroll information, phone numbers, email
accounts, social security numbers, vehicle registration and financial
history. And all that is sliced, isolated, analyzed and mined for data
about you and your habits in a million different ways.
The
dossiers are not restricted to generic market segmenting categories like
“Young Literati” or “Shotguns and Pickups” or “Kids & Cul-de-Sacs,”
but often contain the most private and intimate details about a
person’s life, all of it packaged and sold over and over again to anyone
willing to pay.
Take MEDbase200, a boutique
for-profit intel outfit that specializes in selling health-related
consumer data. Well, until last week, the company offered its clients a
list of
rape victims (or
“rape sufferers,” as the company calls them) at the low price of $79.00
per thousand. The company claims to have segmented this data set into
hundreds of different categories, including stuff like the ailments they
suffer, prescription drugs they take and their ethnicity:
These
rape sufferers are family members who have reported, or have been
identified as individuals affected by specific illnesses, conditions or
ailments relating to rape. Medbase200 is the owner of this list. Select
from families affected by over 500 different ailments, and/or who are
consumers of over 200 different Rx medications. Lists can be further
selected on the basis of lifestyle, ethnicity, geo, gender, and much
more. Inquire today for more information.
MEDbase
promptly took its “rape sufferers” list off line last week after its
existence was revealed in a Senate investigation into the activities of
the data-broker industry. The company pretended like the list was a huge
mistake. A MEDbase rep
tried convincing a
Wall Street Journal
reporter that its rape dossiers were just a “hypothetical list of
health conditions/ailments.” The rep promised it was never sold to
anyone. Yep, it was a big mistake. We can all rest easy now. Thankfully,
MEDbase has hundreds of other similar dossier collections, hawking the
most private and sensitive medical information.
For instance, if
lists of rape victims aren’t your thing, MEDbase can sell dossiers on
people suffering from anorexia, substance abuse, AIDS and HIV,
Alzheimer’s Disease, Asperger Disorder, Attention Deficit Hyperactivity
Disorder, Bedwetting (Enuresis), Binge Eating Disorder, Depression,
Fetal Alcohol Syndrome, Genital Herpes, Genital Warts, Gonorrhea,
Homelessness, Infertility, Syphilis… the
list goes on and on and on and on.
Normally,
such detailed health information would fall under federal law and could
not be disclosed or sold without consent. But because these data
harvesters rely on indirect sources of information instead of medical
records, they’re able to sidestep regulations put in place to protect
the privacy of people’s health data.
MEBbase isn’t the only
company exploiting these loopholes. By the industry’s own estimates,
there are something like 4,000 for-profit intel companies operating in
the United States. Many of them sell information that would normally be
restricted under federal law. They offer all sorts of targeted dossier
collections on
every population segments of our society, from the affluent to the extremely vulnerable:
- people with drug addictions
- detailed personal info on police officers and other government employees
- people with bad credit/bankruptcies
- minorities who’ve used payday loan services
- domestic violence shelter locations (normally these addresses would be shielded by law)
- elderly gamblers
If
you want to see how this kind of profile data can be used to scam
unsuspecting individuals, look no further than a Richard Guthrie, an
Iowa retiree who had his life savings siphoned out of his bank account.
Their weapon of choice: databases bought from large for-profit data
brokers listing retirees who entered sweepstakes and bought lottery
tickets.
Here’s a 2007
New York Timesstory
describing the racket:
Mr.
Guthrie, who lives in Iowa, had entered a few sweepstakes that caused
his name to appear in a database advertised by infoUSA, one of the
largest compilers of consumer information. InfoUSA sold his name, and
data on scores of other elderly Americans, to known lawbreakers,
regulators say.
InfoUSA advertised lists of “Elderly Opportunity
Seekers,” 3.3 million older people “looking for ways to make money,” and
“Suffering Seniors,” 4.7 million people with cancer or Alzheimer’s
disease. “Oldies but Goodies” contained 500,000 gamblers over 55 years
old, for 8.5 cents apiece. One list said: “These people are gullible.
They want to believe that their luck can change.”
Data
brokers argue that cases like Guthrie are an anomaly — a
once-in-a-blue-moon tragedy in an industry that takes privacy and legal
conduct seriously. But cases of identity thieves and sophistical
con-rings obtaining data from for-profit intel businesses abound.
Scammers are a lucrative source of revenue. Their money is just as good
as anyone else’s. And some of the profile “products” offered by the
industry seem tailored specifically to fraud use.
As Royal
Canadian Mounted Police Sergeant Yves Leblanc told the New York Times:
“Only one kind of customer wants to buy lists of seniors interested in
lotteries and sweepstakes: criminals. If someone advertises a list by
saying it contains gullible or elderly people, it’s like putting out a
sign saying ‘Thieves welcome here.’”
So what is InfoUSA, exactly? What kind of company would create and sell lists customized for use by scammers and cons?
As
it turns out, InfoUSA is not some fringe or shady outfit, but a hugely
profitable politically connected company. InfoUSA was started by Vin
Gupta in the 1970s as a basement operation hawking detailed lists of RV
and mobile home dealers. The company quickly expanded into other areas
and began providing business intel services to thousands of businesses.
By 2000, the company raised more than $30 million in venture capital
funding from major Silicon Valley venture capital firms.
By then,
InfoUSA boasted of having information on 230 million consumers. A few
years later, InfoUSA counted the biggest Valley companies as its
clients, including Google, Yahoo, Microsoft and AOL. It got involved not
only in raw data and dossiers, but moved into payroll and financial,
conducted polling and opinion research, partnered with CNN, vetted
employees and provided customized services for law enforcement and all
sorts of federal and government agencies: processing government
payments, helping states locate tax cheats and even administrating
President Bill Clinton “Welfare to Work” program. Which is not
surprising, as Vin Gupta is a major and
close political supporter of Bill and Hillary Clinton.
In
2008, Gupta was sued by InfoUSA shareholders for inappropriately using
corporate funds. Shareholders accused of Gupta of illegally funneling
corporate money to fund an extravagant lifestyle and curry political
favor. According to the Associated Press, the lawsuit questioned why
Gupta used private corporate jets to fly the Clintons on personal and
campaign trips, and why Gupta awarded Bill Clinton a $3.3 million
consulting gig.
As a result of the scandal, InfoUSA was threatened
with delisting from Nasdaq, Gupta was forced out and the company was
snapped up for half a billion dollars by CCMP Capital Advisors, a major
private equity firm spun off from JP Morgan in 2006. Today, InfoUSA
continues to do business under the name Infogroup, and has nearly 4,000
employees working in nine countries.
As big as Infogroup is, there
are dozens of other for-profit intelligence businesses that are even
bigger: massive multi-national intel conglomerates with revenues in the
billions of dollars. Some of them, like Lexis-Nexis and Experian, are
well known, but mostly these are outfits that few Americans have heard
of, with names like Epsilon, Altegrity and Acxiom.
These
for-profit intel behemoths are involved in everything from debt
collection to credit reports to consumer tracking to healthcare
analysis, and provide all manner of tailored services to government and
law enforcement around the world. For instance, Acxiom has done business
with most major corporations, and boasts of intel on “500 million
active consumers worldwide, with about 1,500 data points per person.
That includes a majority of adults in the United States,” according to
the
New York Times.
This
data is analyzed and sliced in increasingly sophisticated and intrusive
ways to profile and predict behavior. Merchants are using it customize
shopping experience— Target
launched a program to
figure out if a woman shopper was pregnant and when the baby would be
born, “even if she didn’t want us to know.” Life insurance companies are
experimenting with predictive consumer intel to estimate life
expectancy and determine eligibility for life insurance policies.
Meanwhile, health insurance companies are raking over this data in order
to deny and challenge the medical claims of their policyholders.
Even
more alarming, large employers are turning to for-profit intelligence
to mine and monitor the lifestyles and habits of their workers outside
the workplace. Earlier this year, the
Wall Street Journal described how
employers have partnered with health insurance companies to monitor
workers for “health-adverse” behavior that could lead to higher medical
expenses down the line:
Your company already knows
whether you have been taking your meds, getting your teeth cleaned and
going for regular medical checkups. Now some employers or their
insurance companies are tracking what staffers eat, where they shop and
how much weight they are putting on — and taking action to keep them in
line.
But companies also have started scrutinizing employees’
other behavior more discreetly. Blue Cross and Blue Shield of North
Carolina recently began buying spending data on more than 3 million
people in its employer group plans. If someone, say, purchases plus-size
clothing, the health plan could flag him for potential obesity — and
then call or send mailings offering weight-loss solutions.
…”Everybody
is using these databases to sell you stuff,” says Daryl Wansink,
director of health economics for the Blue Cross unit. “We happen to be
trying to sell you something that can get you healthier.”
“As
an employer, I want you on that medication that you need to be on,”
says Julie Stone, a HR expert at Towers Watson told the Wall Street
Journal.
Companies might try to frame it as a health issue. I
mean, what kind of asshole could be against employers caring about the
wellbeing of their workers? But their ultimate concern has nothing to do
with the employee health. It’s all about the brutal bottom line:
keeping costs down.
An employer monitoring and controlling your
activity outside of work? You don’t have to be union agitator to see the
problems with this kind of mindset and where it could lead. Because
there are lots of things that some employers might want to know about
your personal life, and not only to “keep costs down.” It could be
anything: to weed out people based on undesirable habits or discriminate
against workers based on sexual orientation, regulation and political
beliefs.
It’s not difficult to imagine that a large corporation
facing a labor unrest or a unionization drive would be interested in
proactively flagging potential troublemakers by pinpointing employees
that might be sympathetic to the cause. But the technology and data is
already here for wide and easy application: did a worker watch certain
political documentaries, donate to environmental non-profits, join an
animal rights Facebook group, tweet out support for Occupy Wall Street,
subscribe to the Nation or Jacobin, buy Naomi Klein’s “Shock Doctrine”?
Or maybe the worker simply rented one of Michael Moore’s films? Run your
payroll through one of the massive consumer intel databases and look if
there is any matchup. Bound to be plenty of unpleasant surprises for
HR!
This has happened in the past, although in a cruder and more
limited way. In the 1950s, for instance, some lefty intellectuals had
their lefty newspapers and mags delivered to P.O. boxes instead of their
home address, worrying that otherwise they’d get tagged as
Commie sympathizers. That might have worked in the past. But with the
power of private intel companies, today there’s nowhere to hide.
FTC
Commissioner Julie Brill has repeatedly voiced concern that unregulated
data being amassed by for-profit intel companies would be used to
discriminate and deny employment, and to determine consumer access to
everything from credit to insurance to housing. “As Big Data algorithms
become more accurate and powerful, consumers need to know a lot more
about the ways in which their data is used,” she told the
Wall Street Journal.
Pam
Dixon, executive director of the Privacy World Forum, agrees. Dixon
frequently testifies on Capitol Hill to warn about the growing danger to
privacy and civil liberties posed by big data and for-profit
intelligence. In Congressional testimony back in 2009, Dixon called this
growing mountain of data the “modern permanent record” and explained
that users of these new intel capabilities will inevitably expand to
include not just marketers and law enforcement, but insurance companies,
employers, landlords, schools, parents, scammers and stalkers. “The
information – like credit reports – will be used to make basic decisions
about the ability of individual to travel, participate in the economy,
find opportunities, find places to live, purchase goods and services,
and make judgments about the importance, worthiness, and interests of
individuals.”
* *
For the past year, Chairman John D. (Jay)
Rockefeller IV has been conducting a Senate Commerce Committee
investigation of the data broker industry and how it affects consumers.
The committee finished its investigation last week without reaching any
real conclusions, but issued a report warning about the dangers posed by
the for-profit intel industry and the need for further action by
lawmakers. The report noted with concern that many of these firms failed
to cooperate with the investigation into their business practices:
Data
brokers operate behind a veil of secrecy. Three of the largest
companies – Acxiom, Experian, and Epsilon – to date have been similarly
secretive with the Committee with respect to their practices, refusing
to identify the specific sources of their data or the customers who
purchase it. … The refusal by several major data broker companies to
provide the Committee complete responses regarding data sources and
customers only reinforces the aura of secrecy surrounding the industry.
Rockefeller’s
investigation was an important first step breaking open this secretive
industry, but it was missing one notable element. Despite its focus on
companies that feed on people’s personal data, the investigation did not
include Google or the other big Surveillance Valley data munchers. And
that’s too bad. Because if anything, the investigation into data brokers
only highlighted the danger posed by the consumer-facing data companies
like Google, Facebook, Yahoo and Apple.
As intrusive as data
brokers are, the level of detail in the information they compile on
Americans pales to what can be vacuumed up by a company like Google. To
compile their dossiers, traditional data brokers rely on mostly indirect
intel: what people buy, where they vacation, what websites they visit.
Google, on the other hand, has access to the raw uncensored contents of
your inner life: personal emails, chats, the diary entries and medical
records that we store in the cloud, our personal communication with
doctors, lawyers, psychologists, friends. Data brokers know us through
our spending habits. Google accesses the unfiltered details of our
personal lives.
A recent study showed that Americans are
overwhelmingly opposed to having their online activity tracked and
analyzed. Seventy-three percent of people polled for the
Pew Internet & American Life Project viewed
the tracking of their search history as an invasion of privacy, while
68 percent were against targeted advertising, replying: “I don’t like
having my online behavior tracked and analyzed.”
This isn’t news
to companies like Google, which last year warned shareholders: “Privacy
concerns relating to our technology could damage our reputation and
deter current and potential users from using our products and services.”
Little
wonder then that Google, and the rest of Surveillance Valley, is
terrified that the conversation about surveillance could soon broaden
to include not only government espionage, but for-profit spying as well.
You are incapable of imagining what is known about you and what it is being used for and what it will be used for.
ReplyDeleteYou have no idea how they are already controlling you politically and in ways imaginable.
How so? NSA and others who have and use the data process it in ways that the brain does not.