If you post that data on a public domain, that is publicly available. It's like writing that info on a cardboard and putting it in the town square and then saying 'why you people steal my data!'
I disagree because there is a difference between posting something publicly for humans and posting something publicly for bots/large scale analysis. I'm ok with my employer possibly being able to see whether I am looking for a new job or not on LinkedIn if that means they would need to have a human looking at my LinkedIn page. I am not ok with them training some ML algorithm to monitor my LinkedIn page to determine how likely I am to leave the company at all times.
Another danger is when public but not easily accessible data is able to deanonymize datasets which is probably the norm rather than the exception for anonymized datasets. Sure there are technical measures to make it better, but at the end of the day I think a lot of privacy is about respecting social boundaries and not breaking these protection measures even if technically possible. Most of the time, these measures are really about keeping honest people honest and not about stopping dedicated attackers.
slaymaker1907|4 years ago
Another danger is when public but not easily accessible data is able to deanonymize datasets which is probably the norm rather than the exception for anonymized datasets. Sure there are technical measures to make it better, but at the end of the day I think a lot of privacy is about respecting social boundaries and not breaking these protection measures even if technically possible. Most of the time, these measures are really about keeping honest people honest and not about stopping dedicated attackers.
LamaOfRuin|4 years ago