โIf youโre not paying for it, you are the productโ.
The sentiment was coined decades ago, but itโs more pertinent than ever; if you got that service for free, perhaps youโre the product being sold to someone else... but which part of you is being sold? Just as importantly, who developed it and why?
- Another way of looking at it is โthereโs no such thing as a free lunchโ.
- Also, itโs extremely likely that โif it seems too good to be true, it probably isโ.
- Plus, the Duck Test still holds: โif it looks like a duck, swims like a duck, quacks like a duck, then itโs probably a duckโ.
Why the rhetoric? Because asking these questions can keep you safe; itโs precisely these principles behind the security vulnerabilities and data breaches, from which weโre all trying to protect ourselves. You may be surprised to learn that the free app you downloaded isnโt free at all: itโs collecting information about you and selling it to someone else. If youโre lucky, itโs anonymised metrics, off to somewhere trustworthyโโโand you may be cool with thisโโโthatโs great. However, if youโre unlucky, it could monitoring you, pumping your contacts, data and credit card details to people you really donโt want to have it.
Examples:
- Benign? Many Websites: showing tailored adverts based on your browsing patterns.
- Benign? Shazam: collecting data and using it to analyse trends, which are sold to large organisations to predict sales, inform marketing etc.
- Benign? AVG Free Antivirus: if youโre using the free version, your browsing historyโs for sale, maybe even your private browsingโโโthey have the ability.
- Suspect? Google (search, Gmail, YouTube etc): watching every move, building a huge repository of information about you and your habits; the EU Justice Commissioner believed it breached EU Law.
- Suspect? Facebook (instagram): really, you already know what theyโre doing, but do you trust them?
- Harmful? Brain Test App, essentially pointless, but software which caused the infection of 1 million Android devices and undermined Google Playโs security.
- Harmful? WeChat, NetEase and other apps on Apple App Store, which had been compromised when developers used an Apple XCode Development kit, which they didnโt download from Apple (why?). Itโs thought these apps then tried to steal iCloud credentials (i.e. itโd give them everything).
- Wrong? StealthGenie: Spying on you, via your microphone, camera or location
Thereโs no foolproof way to fully mitigate against this, but there are a few good pointersโโโreputable companies, trusted organisations, well known products... and a healthy dose of skepticism and common sense.
Lessons:
Next time youโre considering downloading something free, or almost free, be skeptical. First ask:
- What information could it hold?
- What could it really do with that?
- Do I really need it?
- How do they make money...
- If they sell me, is it a fair trade?
- Do I trust them?
So, remember, when youโre looking for that elusive deal, if youโre not paying cash, youโre paying with personal information.