Facebook has been in the news lately, causing its stock value to fluctuate since the 3/16 announcement that it was suspending Cambridge Analytica due to unauthorized access and use of Facebook’s user data. Due to this revelation, the CEO of the company, Mark Zuckerberg, spent two grueling days testifying before Congress to defend his company’s processes, technology and actions. When he was asked, “would you be comfortable sharing the name of your hotel?” he said “no” – ironic given that Facebook tracks its users’ locations. One of the many events that prompted the testimony is the investigation of Cambridge Analytica and how they used Facebook data in political campaign mining.

The question of privacy is a big one, however most consumers and even businesses don’t give it enough thought.

Growing up, I was always taught that there is no such thing as free lunch. It seems many of us don’t realize that when you get a free service, such as many social media apps, that the service provider has to find a way to monetize their user base in order to survive. Early on, for Facebook, that monetization was about advertising, but like any growing business with duties to the shareholders, Facebook had to diversify its revenue streams. Therefore, additional monetization of personal data was inevitable. Further, one cannot forget that this is a very large company. I am certain that many parts of the company at times do not necessarily communicate with each other, so it is not surprising that the api team, as an example, may not have taken the latest privacy settings into account. It may not have been intentional.

On the heels of the Facebook scandal, the following are key areas concerning your privacy that should be thought through as a business or individual:

  1. Social media and intent of data
  2. Email communication and data collection
  3. Devices and data collection

What most people don’t talk about when discussing privacy is their responsibility to keep data private – whether their individual data or that of a corporation for which they work. In fact, when people choose to share information on social media, it is intended to be shared. How many people really read the terms of use or privacy contracts before clicking “I accept”? It is the responsibility of the individual to realize what happens when they present their data for the world to see. If people are concerned with privacy they can simply elect not to put private information on social sites to be viewed.

It is a bit different with email, although free email services also index our content and serve up advertising accordingly. Email is a significant target for bad actors simply due to the amount of private information shared within correspondence and left unsecure. Consider what you send through email and just as important, what you leave in email.

Also, don’t forget that your devices are now constantly pinging information about you – reporting back to various services and applications. So carefully consider what to have on, such as location finder, bluetooth etc., and carefully select which apps to install – as all of the old school apps collect data.

Finally, consider applications such as Vaporstream, where the entire premise is the opposite of the traditional apps. The Vaporstream Secure Messaging Platform is built for privacy. It does not store user or organizational data, so there is nothing to sell. Vaporstream does not collect or sell it, we never index or even see any user messages. We also do not use location in order to protect user privacy. This is all by design. Real privacy is worth it.

To find out more about Vaporstream Secure Messaging and our views on privacy, contact us or request to see Vaporstream in action.

Contributor: Galina Datskovsky