Saturday, December 11, 2021

The Internet of Things is Horrible and Growing Worse…

The Internet of Things is Horrible and Growing Worse… 

 

Apple has allowed app developers to collect data from its 1bn iPhone users for targeted advertising, in an unacknowledged shift that lets companies follow a much looser interpretation of its controversial privacy policy.

 

-       Apple reached quite truce over iPhone privacy changes, FT

  

The outage at Amazon.com Inc.’s cloud-computing arm left thousands of people in the U.S. without working fridges, roombas and doorbells, highlighting just how reliant people have become on the company as the Internet of Things proliferates across homes. 

 

Affected Amazon services included the voice assistant Alexa and Ring smart-doorbell unit. Irate device users tweeted their frustrations to Ring’s official account…  Multiple Ring users even said they weren’t able to get into their homes without access to the phone app, which was down. 

 

-       How Amazon Outage Left Smart Homes Not So Smart After All, Bloomberg

 

A nationwide group of utility companies that provided sensitive data from millions of Americans’ cable, phone and power bills to U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement and other government agencies has agreed to end the practice in response to concerns the information was being misused.

 

After The Washington Post revealed ICE’s use of the data in February, Sen. Ron Wyden (D-Ore.) pushed the National Consumer Telecom & Utilities Exchange to end the sale of more than 170 million people’s names, home addresses, Social Security numbers and other details gathered from companies that provide the essential elements of modern life.

  

-       Utility giants agree to no longer allow sensitive records to be shared with ICE, Washington Post

 

 

Gregg Wall (12-11-2021)

 

It was yet another interesting week in the Internet of Things… when no fewer than three articles caught my eye.

 

The first piece, published in the FT, that grabbed my attention was how Apple -- the champion of monopoly, labor exploitation, crushing & dismantling competition, and kowtowing to Sino-totalitarian tyranny -- was quietly backpedaling on its commitments to user privacy.  Apparently, Apple, capitulating to the Internet of Things, is allowing vendors, such as Meta/Facebook, to go on harvesting data in perpetuity…  despite Tim Cook’s strong sales pitch at user privacy.  One observer, in the aforementioned article, noted: “Apple can’t put themselves in a situation where they are basically gutting their top-performing apps from a user-consumption perspective. This would ultimately hurt iOS.”

 

What is unclear is how privacy hurts iOS?  Apple has ran entire advertising campaigns on privacy, so clearly the leviathan felt privacy was good for business.  Apple’s retreat instead shows who the corporate brass believes their real customers are… not the adults & young kids that buy up Apple products like so much candy. But rather, the faceless men & women in boardrooms, C-suites, and in America’s police & surveillance state that buys up all that data. 

 

The second piece, published in Bloomberg, was enjoyable to read.  As the Amazon behemoth came crashing down, in the form of the cloud or Amazon Web Services.  What’s amazing about this story is that despite all the cool things the web has provided, it’s failed completely at many things: from personal data & privacy protection to, well, getting hacked and having personal data stole, the resulting extortion, theft, and services collapse.  Who are the thousands that have placed their homes under Amazon’s control and surveillance?  Is one so lazy that they need Alexa to dim the lights or rely upon Ring to tell one who is at the door?  Do consumers not care, or are they that oblivious, that every facet of their lives is being stolen & surveilled by these devices and every other device in their homes? 

 

As the article went on to note, more than a few less smart home owners were gloating, at least they could still place a key into the door and walk into their homes. 

 

The third article, coming out of the Washington Post, reminds us it’s not just corporations and multinationals buying up and hoovering up all that data; but an entire American police and surveillance state is busy, 24/7/365, using data gathered by utilities for unconstitutional ends.  Turns out the Orwellian named, National Consumer Telecom & Utilities Exchange, has been giving data gathered by utilities to the credit rating cartel, namely Equifax… which in turn sells the data to ICE, government agencies, and the police state.  After the Post exposed this operation, Senator Wyden of Oregon had it shut down, by exposing the clear civil liberties violation.  But fear not, as the article goes onto note, vague rules and regulations, as well as lax and captured regulatory agencies, all but ensure the U.S. police & surveillance state will have other data bases to access and crack (as they trample over the Constitution). 

 

Of course, these three articles bring to mind our corrupt, feckless, and day trading U.S. Congress.  The endless committee hearings Congress holds on these topics, the countless studies, and representatives’ and senators’ complete inability to do anything right for the American people.  Least of all, hold tech utilities, endless data gathering & surveillance… and the outright contempt Silicon Valley, and multinationals, have for civil liberties and the American people… in check.  After the latest whistleblower came before Congress concerning Facebook/Meta, and given all the sordid revelations (from manipulation of billions of citizens around the globe to targeting children, and all the irreparable harm to democracy & individual lives - in the name of profits)… for a brief shining moment, it appeared Congress had to act.  But per the usual, the insider traders – masquerading as political leadership - are counting their money and shuffling stocks around. 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

I’m old enough to remember the internet from the beginning, the hope that it brought, the democratization of data & information, and the advancement of education and knowledge… and I look at it today, and yes, some of that hope is still alive.  But for the most part, today’s internet is merely an extension of everything else billionaires and Wall St. get their hands on: the commodification of all human endeavor; the worship of data and money; the capture & corruption of U.S. democracy & the government, for the sake of profits; the crushing of jobs, innovation, and opportunity (indeed, the economy itself), by a greedy few; the reinforcement of systemic racism & misogyny, as the cornerstone of the U.S. economy; and the rank double standard & hypocrisy, as billionaires and monopolies dictate to the U.S. government and then cower before their totalitarian masters in China. 

 

The internet and the whole authoritarian set of utilities appears to be the consolidation of all the past sins of capitalism … magnified and increased exponentially.  Entirely captured and profited from by a privileged few, w/ hegemonic control over humanity.  You know, citizens, who are little more than data cogs in one ultra-nasty & malevolent machine.  The web's mantra, today: freedom for none, enslavement to Silicon Valley’s biz model, and surveillance for all.  

 

The ultimate buzzkill. 

 

If Orwell were alive today, he’d say, I told you so.  And then he’d recommend pulling the plug on the entire sorry mess. 

 

Copyright JM Hamilton Publishing 2021

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