Google as well as
Yahoo, Microsoft and AOL among others are gearing up to keep a much
closer eye on all of us, so that within five years these and other firms
will routinely track our movements, friends, interests, purchases and
correspondence - then make money by helping marketers take advantage of
the information.
These companies' brash plans are
pushing us toward a thorny choice that will determine the future of
computing. Google and other Web-oriented, information-service giants are
determined to build a breathtaking array of services based on your
personal information, and they're betting you'll be willing to share it
with them in order for you to reap the benefits. But if we cooperate and
let them in on the details of our lives, we'll lose much of our
privacy, and possibly a lot more.
A privacy backlash,
however, would stifle these potentially revolutionary services before
they get off the ground - and leave the computer industry's biggest
plans for growth in tatters. That may be just what some people want. The
U.S. Congress is considering four bills that would make it illegal to
collect and share information online or through cell phones about people
without clearer warning and permission. These sorts of restrictions are
already in effect throughout much of Europe, thanks in part to European
Union directives on privacy and electronic communications passed in
2002 and 2003.
The good news is that there's no
reason to choose between technology and privacy. New technologies are
emerging that can doctor our data so that companies know just enough
about us to ply us with customized services, while preventing them from
getting a clear picture of our private lives. The question is again one
of trust: in this case, whether people will come to trust the companies
that are trying to build these new technologies.
(abridged from Next Frontiers in Newsweek, April 3, 2006)
In the text, brash means