Law in the Internet Society

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GoogleBuyingUpPrivacy 3 - 07 Sep 2012 - Main.IanSullivan
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 I came across this article and thought it was relevant to our class. Apparently Google is going to pay users to track their search history. Users who install a browser extension get $5 Amazon gift cards every 3 months they stay with the program; others can earn $100 (and another $20 each month) for installing a physical black box that lets Google track web usage. Should we be concerned about this? Here are 3 issues/questions:

(1) For those who take Google up on this deal, is this an economically rational decision? On the one hand, it sure looks like one: a participating user decides that he or she values a $5 Amazon gift card (or whatever the payment is) more than data privacy and enters into an economic transaction reflecting this valuation. Alternatively, it's possible that a person could think Google already has such broad access to our information that the marginal amount of privacy lost by downloading the extension or installing the black box is inconsequential. In other words, a person may reason "as long as my privacy is being violated and I'm willing to go along for the ride, I should get what I can out of this relationship."


Revision 3r3 - 07 Sep 2012 - 16:52:49 - IanSullivan
Revision 2r2 - 27 Feb 2012 - 03:26:09 - ThomasHou
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