Anyway, I still say it is hypocritical to try to avoid a company like Microsoft or Google or Facebook, and then go out and use a credit card, shop at a department store, or drive on highways, ride subways, or go through airports where your every move is on camera.
I don't know tgp. I still think hypocrisy is a very unfair accusation. I consider you to be one of the smartest people in these forums and I'm surprised that even your analysis seems to lack any and all nuance.
Obviously, companies that target adds aren't the only entities interested in collecting information about customers and/or people in general. That doesn't mean all types of tracking are identical or equally egregious. You seem to make no distinction between who is doing the tracking, for what reasons they collect the data, and the amount of information those entities have access to. In your mind they're apparently all interchangeable, so worrying about one more than another seems pointless or hypocritical to you. ??? :-/
At least in Switzerland, the only entities legally capable of tracking and logging location information on any cell phone, irrespective of OS, is the government (via carriers). If you live in an oppressive/authoritarian state, that might be terrible, but from your earlier posts I take it you don't find this problematic in the U.S.. As I live in Switzerland, I don't either, in part because accessing that information requires at least some court involvement.
The same is true of my credit card transactions. Card issuers can't combine that data with other information, hand it out to other companies, or use it for anything else but credit card related processing. The view one company gleans from this data is quite limited, and it's specific to the task I'm paying them to do. Nothing more.
Companies like Google and Facebook can cast a much wider data-net, across very different types of services, which they consolidate into a single profile. For these sorts of companies, there is no limit to the breadth or depth of information required to do their job. More is always better. It baffles my mind that you see no difference between this and the previously mentioned examples.
I doubt it, but maybe U.S. carriers, financial institutions, government agencies etc have few to no legal restrictions on what information they can share? For example, I recently read the U.S. congress has allowed U.S. ISPs to sniff any data transferred between their customers and the internet services they use (consent is implicit), and sell that to whomever they want, without data anonymiztion. The U.S. citizenry either (like you said) just bent over or did nothing. If that's true, then I guess you might have a point that it makes no difference to you folks, but that's in no way comparable to the environment I live in. Maybe you're right that we're judging this from the viewpoints of slightly different cultures, which has lead to very different opinions on how undignified it is to turn an entire populace into a product.
That's the only reason I can come up with why we still don't see eye-to-eye on this.