Alex McDougall is the co-founder of Bicameral Ventures, a venture capital firm focused on blockchain, interoperability, data and identity self-sovereignty, personalized AI and Web 3.0.
The business model where users with the fewest privacy settings are the most profitable. The opaque data policies that routinely top 10,000 words and legal experts agree are nonsensical. The use of trackers and pixels to allow data players to reach far outside their own domain and index web traffic not even remotely attached to the âservicesâ they offer. Especially the data and content creators who are routinely either completely excluded or massively de-prioritized when it comes to divvying up the value of the platforms they power. Our data paradigm has been broken for a while now.
We generally acknowledge this break with some form of âyeah, I know Google is building an archetype of me for their own purposes, but what else am I gonna do? Plus look how pretty their site is!â Regulators acknowledge this challenge and there have been well-meaning attempts to legislate a better outcome to this with privacy focused legislations such as GDPR and CCPA. These laws are well-intentioned, but I believe fatally incomplete in two ways.Â
See also: Alex McDougall â Data Creators Should Share in the Profits From Big Data
First, until you either fix the fundamental mismatch of privacy and profit, or alter the system by which investors expect ever increasing quarterly earnings, we will never get a real âprivateâ future led by todayâs tech giants. They are too nimble, too powerful, too incentivized by profits and operate in a world thatâs too ill defined to be shackled by slow-moving legislation. Legislation that can be innovated around or worse, repurposed for their own intentions.
Secondly, especially in a post COVID-19 virtualized world, âprivacyâ by forced disconnection is NOT what we need. Prior to this devastating global outbreak, despite mounting work from home and virtual office technology, the majority of business still happens face to face. Thatâs especially true of the high-value âclosingâ type interactions and the high-value networking engagements (the real point of conferences!).Â
Legislation that can be innovated around or worse, repurposed for their own intentions.
Same story with social interactions. Yes, social media has been the defining force of our past 15 years, but the majority of the important interactions in our lives still happen in person, especially the high-emotional-engagement interactions (romance, family gatherings).Â
Same story with health and wellness. You learn digitally, but execute treatment plans in person. We donât need further disconnection, we need a new digital paradigm to replace our most important interactions without completely losing our humanity.
You may recognize a correlation here between the things we generally do in person and the events that would be most valuable for current data players to observe and model. For example, buy decisions, romantic choices and family dynamics. Up until now, youâve always been able to, at least somewhat convincingly, âopt-outâ of the data paradigm. While itâs a wrench to leave Facebook when all your friends and family are there, itâs possible. You can live without Facebook.
In the future, it may be impossible to leave societyâs dominant data matrix behind.Â
With the COVID-19 pandemic causing widespread isolating lockdowns and sweeping social distancing measures, weâre about to enter into a world of unprecedented digital mediation. Our digital mediators, with all-time low trust and all-time power high, are about to get even more omnipotent in our lives.Â
See also: Lindsey Barrett â When Corporations Violate Privacy, They Do Concrete Harm
Unfortunately, privacy by itself isnât the answer to this; it would be a lot simpler if it was. Our data feeds are the lifeblood of our digital personas and our digital personas are about to become our only personas. Slowing down and blocking them at a time where weâre about to lose our ability to physically connect is a recipe for isolation socially and economically.Â
In the current world, we donât have control over our digital personas. They are generated, enhanced, tailored and monetized in the shadows. The profiles are rich and detailed and, in some cases, incredibly accurate. Have a look at what Google knows about you sometime.Â
More privacy without fixing the underlying paradigm isnât what we need.
Why donât we have the infrastructure we can control? I can see my Google profile and even download an Excel of it. Why isnât there a secure vehicle where I take that Google profile, correct whatâs wrong and supplement it with my Twitter, Netflix, Lyft, Apple Health, government ID, health and personal information to make a real digital version of me that I can use to connect and share myself?Â
There are many reasons, including slow emerging distributed technology and strong consumer inertia, that this doesnât exist today. But this user-controlled, 360-degree, digital profile is whatâs going to form the kernel of a world where we can capture some semblance of our valuable physical interactions, in a digital setting.Â
See also: Elizabeth Renieris â An Identity Layer for the Web Would Identify Us Everywhere
More privacy without fixing the underlying paradigm isnât what we need. We need more rich data to make better algorithms and more virtual spaces that facilitate deeper, self-sovereign digital interactions. Here are three key pieces of infrastructure, as I see it:
Sounds like a lot of stuff to build right? Luckily, we have a secret weapon: Our data is exponentially more valuable when weâre sharing it willingly. Google has become one of the most valuable companies on Earth by quietly trying to run digital simulations of all of us. Still, the value of years of surveillance is a tiny fraction of the value of you or I filling out an honest 10-minute survey.Â
Weâre at a tipping point. We need to re-orient our data paradigm away from the âabstract and extractâ model to one where individuals and businesses start our own digital identities. We need the tools, products, ecosystem and user willingness to adopt this new world. It wonât be an overnight solution. But the economics of shared data can be incredible, and the reward for getting it done is nothing less than the salvation of integrity and humanity in our post-COVID world of digital interactions.