Mozilla's Denelle Dixon-Thayer: Trading Away Your Privacy
Don't trust Facebook or Google with your personal information? You're not alone.
A
recent Reason-Rupe poll found that when it comes to their personal
info, more Americans trust even the National Security Agency or the
Internal Revenue Service over Google or Facebook.
Mozilla's Vice
President of Business and Legal Affairs, Denelle Dixon-Thayer, says
"data hygiene" should be something every new or established tech company
should be thinking about.
"Trust is our currency," said Thayer
to Reason TV at the 2014 South by Southwest Interactive Festival in
Austin, Texas. "If we don't have the trust of our users then we actually
aren't going to be successful as a company."
Dixon-Thayer says
big data companies need to be upfront with users about who has access to
their data, how long their data is stored, and do what they can to
inform users of government data requests.
"With data, may come a
reward, but also a substantial risk," says Dixon-Thayer, who points out
that if you keep information for a long time your company becomes open
to subpoenas and NSA requests.
"It's just thinking about what that data can do for you and when does it lose its value to you," says Dixon-Thayer
In
October 2013, Mozilla endorsed the USA FREEDOM Act, which would have
amended the PATRIOT Act and ended dragnet collection of phone data while
providing more oversight of surveillance programs and the FISA court.
The bill is pending in the house judiciary committee.
She should do the super fast talking 'fine print' words at the end of TV commercials.
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