Your credit card companies, despite having you choose the level of “privacy” (false sense of security), generally leave themselves the ability to exchange your information with their “partners” - that is, in reality, anyone they can make a dime off of selling them your information.
Credit card A is used on the Walmart app to purchase something - and drops a cookie or two on your device. Credit card B is used in store. Name match, dumps your purchase data into same file folder in a Big Brother conglomeration site.
Ever wonder why, when you’re just browsing completely unrelated sites online ads pop up with the exact items you looked at a couple days ago?
They’re all one big happy Big Brother operation. Expectations of privacy are ill-founded. Just another issue that needs to be addressed once the DS filth is eliminated.
Your credit card companies, despite having you choose the level of “privacy” (false sense of security), generally leave themselves the ability to exchange your information with their “partners” - that is, in reality, anyone they can make a dime off of selling them your information.
Credit card A is used on the Walmart app to purchase something - and drops a cookie or two on your device. Credit card B is used in store. Name match, dumps your purchase data into same file folder in a Big Brother conglomeration site.
Ever wonder why, when you’re just browsing completely unrelated sites online ads pop up with the exact items you looked at a couple days ago?
They’re all one big happy Big Brother operation. Expectations of privacy are ill-founded. Just another issue that needs to be addressed once the DS filth is eliminated.