Privacy
for Sale: Peddling Data on the Internet
By
Andrew L. Shapiro
I’ve
got Ted Turner’s social security number here, along with Rush Limbaugh’s
home address, and a couple of phone numbers for Bob Dole in Kansas.
I found this information for free on the Internet in about ten minutes.
With a little money and some wily sleuthing, I could probably use
this data to get their credit histories, financial records, and maybe
some confidential medical facts. I might even be able to screw around
with their bank accounts.
It
is this naked vulnerability that has, quite justifiably, made Americans
increasingly anxious about privacy over the past two decades. A 1995
Louis Harris poll found that 82 percent of respondents were concerned
about their personal privacy, up from 64 percent in 1978. Over the
same period, the proportion of those who were "very concerned"
about privacy increased almost 50 percent. This new fear reflects
the emergence of a sophisticated system of private surveillance—or
"dataveillance," as David Shenk calls it in his new book,
Data Smog—that is rapidly overshadowing threats from the state.
It
was once too expensive for anyone but the government to collect, store,
and coordinate data, creating profiles on hundreds of millions of
citizens. But the creeping ubiquity of digital computer technology
has ushered in a major industry of high-tech data pushers who are
dedicated to gathering and selling personal information about practically
everyone, mostly for marketing purposes. (Privacy experts estimate
that the average American is profiled in at least twenty-five, and
perhaps as many as 100 databases.) "Marketers can follow every
aspect of our lives, from the first phone call we make in the morning
to the time our security system says we have left the house, to the
video camera at the toll booth and the charge slip we have for lunch,"
said President Clinton recently. With the rise of online commerce
and communication, this collection increasingly happens imperceptibly
and without the consent of the observed. The result is a broad and
lucrative market for personal information that allows anyone with
a buck to find out a whole lot about anyone else—often just by trolling
around the Net. It’s Orwell meets Adam Smith, introduced by Bill Gates.
Traditionally,
privacy advocates have responded to this problem with calls for broad
federal legislation to replace the current patchwork of state and
federal law that leaves personal data woefully unprotected. Proposals
usually require conspicuous notice of what information is being collected
and for what purpose; meaningful and informed consent by consumers
(for example, allowing them to "opt in" to data collection
rather than having to "opt out"); the ability to access
files about oneself and to correct inaccuracies; a scheme of redress
for violations; and creation of an independent federal privacy protection
agency to enforce compliance.
But
in the current deregulatory climate, the Clinton Administration and
some privacy defenders are taking a different approach. They’re calling
for the creation of a market for privacy to compete with or complement
the growing market for personal information. (A report released in
April by a presidential advisory panel, for example, mentioned "the
intriguing possibility that privacy could emerge as a market commodity
in the Information Age.") Just as there is demand for consumer
data among profiteers, so there is a counterdemand on the part of
individuals to keep that information private. The answer, say these
advocates, is to have consumers bargain with vendors over acceptable
rules for data collection and use.
For
example, if I’m a real stickler for privacy, I may want to pay more
to use an Internet service provider or a Website that will guarantee
me Level 5 privacy (on a hypothetical 1 to 5 scale where 5 represents
a commitment not to gather any data). Someone else who doesn’t care
at all about privacy can pay less to use a Level 1 provider, the kind
that sucks up data like a Dustbuster. From the company’s standpoint,
this makes sense because there is monetary value in that data. If
they get it, they charge you less (or give you more); if they don’t,
they charge more (or provide less).
This,
in some sense, is how the World Wide Web works today. Websites generally
offer their material for free; in return, users give them personal
information. This may mean typing your name, phone number or, whatever
in some blank registration field. By using something called "cookies,"
Websites also surreptitiously collect data such as what Internet service
provider you use, what site you most recently visited, what computer
and browser you’re using (for a demonstration, see www.cdt.org/privacy).
Since the Net is already so geared toward information exchange, some
privacy advocates figure they might as well formalize that process
in an open market. That market would extend beyond cyberspace to every
exchange of data—with the stores you shop at, your doctors, maybe
even your friends.
Now,
before you go postal about how your privacy rights are being sold
down the river, consider some appealing features of the market for
privacy. Recognizing the value of information as an asset, it seeks
to give consumers property rights in that information. Your data and
sanctuary are your own; you sell them only if you choose—and you can,
at least in theory, choose exactly who knows what about you. This
would seem to be better than today’s free-for-all, where the few rules
that exist are vague and, even worse, our data are routinely stolen
from us by invisible thieves.
Consider
also that this market approach has received support not just from
the Netscape-led business consortium looking into it but from many
of the leading digital civil liberties organizations, including the
Center for Democracy and Technology (CDT) and the Electronic Frontier
Foundation (EFF). CDT is working with the World Wide Web Consortium,
the Direct Marketing Association (DMA) and others on the Platform
for Privacy Preferences, a technical standard that will allow users
to negotiate privacy practices with data collectors in a way similar
to my Level 1 to 5 example. EFF has teamed up with other industry
players to create eTrust, a coalition that rewards privacy-friendly
Websites with a sort of Good Housekeeping seal of approval. Even stalwarts
like Marc Rotenberg of the Electronic Privacy Information Center (EPIC)
believe that consumers should start bargaining over the flow of their
facts and figures. "There are already now markets for personal
data," says Rotenberg. "The goal is to make them more fair,
to give individuals more control."
The
problem is, the data pushers will be fighting tooth and nail to see
that this doesn’t happen. And even if it does, the privatization of
privacy will create as many dilemmas as it solves, if not more.
First,
it may make privacy even more elusive than it is today, particularly
online. For example, while dataveillance is the norm on the Net, cybersavvy
privacy hawks have their ways of evading it. One trick is to use technologies
that allow for anonymous Web surfing. Another is the ever popular
low-tech option of providing false information when queried, which
34 percent of Net users admit they do, according to a Georgia Tech
survey (you can bet the real number is higher). These renegade tactics
will likely be unavailable in the world of formally established privacy
markets. Users will have to contract with vendors in an aboveboard
manner. That’s the way the market works. You have to play by the rules,
which may be different at every Website you visit—not to mention noncyber
data interactions (in a store, on the phone, etc.). This points to
a bigger problem: All that time and effort spent dickering over various
privacy arrangements adds up to what economists call high—even inefficiently
high—transaction costs. In plain terms, it means more hassle for what
may be less privacy.
Second,
the privacy market will hit the poor particularly hard. As companies
are able to charge increasingly higher rates for finer shades of privacy,
poorer customers who can’t afford these premiums will be left more
exposed simply by dint of economic disadvantage. Even if the markups
are small, a little added privacy may not seem worth it for those
with little disposable income, especially since they are already likely
to be monitored by the state if they receive welfare or live in high-crime
neighborhoods. (In fact, only 39 percent of Internet users expressed
a willingness to pay a markup of more than half a cent on the dollar
to assure their privacy, according to eTrust.) Do we really want to
perpetuate such a system of first- and second-class privacy rights?
Third,
the privacy market may create a false sense of comfort, blinding us
to certain unforeseeable consequences of dealing in data. For example,
though a company may faithfully notify me that it collects personal
information for direct marketing, I may be exposed to more than just
junk-mail annoyance. Inaccurate or incomplete information in databases
is routinely used to determine whether someone should be hired, insured,
rented to, or given credit. The readily available nature of data can
lead to discrimination, harassment, and even physical danger—as a
Los Angeles reporter demonstrated when she bought detailed information
about 5,000 children from information broker Metromail using the name
of Richard Allen Davis, who was convicted of murdering 12-year-old
Polly Klaas. In the arm’s length transactions of the market, vendors
have "no incentive to have you think about these dangers,"
says Oscar Gandy Jr. of the University of Pennsylvania’s Annenberg
School for Communication. "We’re not going to be fully informed."
Fourth,
there is the problem of unequal bargaining power. While most companies
are less interested in your data than in having you as a customer,
certain powerful firms, such as the three major credit reporting agencies,
are interested exclusively in your numbers. And these companies tend
to be monopolistic, presenting consumers with little real choice in
the market. If you don’t like the terms of the deal they offer, there’s
really nowhere else you can go to establish a reputable credit report
that will allow you to obtain, say, a checking account or a mortgage.
And then there’s the person who arrives at the hospital after a car
accident: Is he supposed to haggle over use of his medical data before
he’s treated? What about kids browsing the Web who stumble upon, say,
the Batman Forever site, which asks them to "help Commissioner
Gordon with the Gotham census" by answering questions about what
products they buy? (The site was recently changed after complaints
from the CME.) As Gandy argues in a recent article, "The fundamental
asymmetry between individuals and bureaucratic organizations all but
guarantees the failure of the market for personal information."
Even a free-marketeer like EFF chairwoman Esther Dyson says, "Where
there is an element of coercion, you want some regulation."
Finally,
looming over all of this is a commodification critique that warns
that privacy and personal information become debased when subjected
to market pressures. "This is like asking people to pay to practice
freedom of religion or free speech," says University of Washington
professor Philip Bereano. "We do not buy and sell civil liberties.
This is commodity fetishism. It is capitalism run amok." So it
would seem. Yet Bereano is actually referring to well-established
privacy rights, like the Fourth Amendment right to be free from unreasonable
search and seizure and the due process right to make decisions about
intimate matters such as contraception and abortion. These rights,
one hopes, cannot be peddled to the highest bidder. The situation
is less clear, however, when it comes to personal information. In
part, that’s because privacy is not well defined or protected in our
legal system (video rental records, for example, are protected but
medical information is not). Privacy is not even mentioned in the
Constitution, and our courts and legislatures have made it the somewhat
insecure stepchild of legal rights.
Look,
for example, at the compromised status of privacy in the ongoing debate
over encryption, the text-scrambling technology that keeps electronic
communications secure. Civil libertarians have argued strenuously
and persuasively against law enforcement’s attempts to tap encrypted
messages—first with the Clipper Chip, now with an equally problematic
"key recovery" scheme. But their arguments based on pure
privacy principles have fallen on deaf ears. Instead, modest progress
now seems likely because of complaints from high-tech giants in a
tizzy over their inability to compete with the foreign software companies
that are dominating the growing global market for encryption tools.
Crypto supporters have every reason to cheer industry’s arm-twisting,
since it may help secure passage of two pending bills in Congress
lifting restrictions on this crucial technology. But a cynic would
conclude that privacy is getting a boost just because profits—and
perhaps some campaign donations—are at stake. What about the idea
that privacy should be protected for its own sake?
Lately,
it’s an idea that has had more currency abroad than it has here. The
Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, for example,
has rejected the Clinton Administration’s attempts to hamstring encryption,
and the European Union (EU) has enacted a strict directive limiting
personal data transfer. Indeed, the EU will prod the United States
during upcoming trade negotiations to beef up its lax standards. The
Europeans can draw on any number of resources to chasten our leaders.
Many instruments of international law recognize that privacy is a
fundamental human right. It is also, according to scholars from various
disciplines, a core value that protects dignity, autonomy, solitude,
and the way we present ourselves to the world.
While
privacy can conceal scourges from scrutiny, it is more often a fulcrum
of democracy preserving other basic freedoms, including rights of
association and free speech, voting, and the pursuit of liberty and
happiness. As Justice William O. Douglas wrote in a 1952 dissent,
echoing an idea expressed earlier by Justice Louis Brandeis, "The
right to be let alone is indeed the beginning of all freedom."
In this view, privacy attains special status: Just as we don’t allow
people to sell their vote, their body parts, or themselves into slavery,
we shouldn’t allow them to sell their privacy.
But
does this mean that I shouldn’t be able to trade my own data for money
or services? The market-failure problems noted above are certainly
red flags. Stanford law professor Margaret Jane Radin, the author
of Contested Commodities, points out that such concerns have
led society to prevent other kinds of bargaining. A landlord, for
example, is legally required to keep a rented apartment habitable;
he can’t ask the renter to waive that requirement in exchange for
reduced rent. Similarly, a company can’t sell a toaster at a $5 discount
to a buyer who agrees not to sue in the event that a product defect
causes her to be injured.
Perhaps,
then, what this market needs is a safety net, a minimal level of personal
information privacy that cannot be bartered away. This baseline should
certainly prevent bargaining with kids. It might also include inalienable
control over our most sensitive material, such as medical and financial
information. Whatever its specific features, a safety net for privacy
would help create an environment where personal information privacy
is the norm, not the exception. The burden would be on data pushers
to justify their practices rather than on hapless individuals trying
to protect themselves in a perplexing new marketplace.
One
more point: Some fans of the market for privacy, particularly those
in industry, seem to think they’ve found a way to protect privacy
that is an alternative to lawmaking and regulation—as if the choice
was either the market or government. This is just wrong. As
Phil Agre of the University of California, San Diego, notes, "Governments
create markets—and the more intangible the commodity, the more that
is true." To work efficiently and equitably, a privacy market
will require a concrete legal regime to protect what’s being traded
and the integrity of that trading. Some sort of federal privacy agency
will likely be necessary for enforcement—to protect against data theft,
and to ensure fair dealing and compliance. Whether or not we trust
the self-regulatory efforts of groups like the DMA, they surely can’t
control the actions of fly-by-night companies that swoop down on the
Net to pick up the trail of an unsuspecting mouse.
What’s
clear is that the market for privacy won’t do away with the need for
new statutory protections and government oversight. It certainly won’t
give consumers the upper hand against the masterminds of dataveillance.
If anything, it will further reduce privacy from an assumed right
to the unceremonious status of a commodity. Folks like Ted Turner,
Rush Limbaugh, and Bob Dole will pay to keep meddlers from getting
access to their confidential information. But what about the rest
of us? If privacy is for sale, will we peddle our digits or save our
data souls?
Andrew
L. Shapiro is a contributing editor to The Nation and fellow
at the Twentieth Century Fund. He may be contacted at ashapiro@interport.net.
This
article was adapted from an article originally written by Andrew L.
Shapiro for The Nation, and is reprinted here with permission.