We trust companies with our information every day. But many companies—even those that hold our most revealing information—are using it not just to provide the services we ask for, but to amp up their profits at the cost of our privacy.That's why EFF has joined a campaign, led by the U.S. Public...
This is why I think gnu taler is a great company and project
Why just Mastercard. ALL payment services are doing this. Everything from payment gateways, card brands, digital wallets (You really think google and apple aren’t logging every detail of your purchases). Seems a bit silly to just call out Mastercard.
Per the article, it seems Visa has already stopped this practice. I think they’re calling out Mastercard as the other top player in the consumer credit card space (I doubt Amex has quite the market dominance Visa / MC do, especially overseas).
And just because Visa is shutting down Ad Solutions does not mean Visa is out of the data-slinging business, but Gerlt declined to provide details as to what that could look like going forward
More importantly, we should stop giving Mastercard our data. Paying for everything with credit cards has been an obviously bad idea since thirty years ago at latest.
Regardless of it being a bad idea, it’s convenience completely overwhelmed any privacy considerations. As far as I can tell, we’re marching towards a cashless future with the last dam being politicians need for untraceable cash themselves. But those old politicians are being replaced by family dynasties who have replaced cash payments with favors for their son’s wife’s firm.
Feudalism with extra steps, as ordained by our Heavenly Father Mr. monopoly man
I use it to pay for VPN and stuff, works pretty well IMO. There's potential scaling issues if too many people use it, but you can get around those by using XMR to privately purchase a different cryptocurrency with higher throughput. Tornado Cash was pretty cool too before they made using it a felony.
But you actually don't know what monero is being used for when it's used in transactions, no one does. You just have a bias that if people want to keep their transactions secret, it must be illegal.
Anything that is private is going to be used for illegal transactions. That is not Monero's fault. If you want it to be used for less illegal transactions, then use it for legal transactions yourself. I personally use it to pay for my life insurance, groceries, phone bill, etc. And as far as I'm aware, none of those are illegal transactions.
It just seems like a scam to me. We buy things with credit cards to get the points and each transaction costs the merchant money. The merchant raises their prices to cover transaction fees, so now you're not really getting points - you're paying hidden fees that get some rewards points for (but not enough). The real scam is that it's such a monopoly now (oligopoly?) that if you don't pay with a credit card then you're losing out - you're paying inflated prices but not getting the reward points.
Now, some people have to pay with credit cards, but that shouldn't be the norm. If you're perpetually one month (ie, one payment) behind on bills, etc, then credit card makes sense, but that should be an edge case - just need to save for a month and then you're good. (yes, lots of shoulds and wishful thinking there, I know, read the next paragraph).
If you fall more than a month behind on payments, the you're paying some 20% interest, which is likely going to destroy you anyways. So living "a month behind", while maybe the reality for many is likely to get way worse before it gets better.
I will acknowledge that CC companies provide things like insurance and liability protection. I think that if governments and/or banks could provide this, there would be no good reason to use a credit card beyond the odd big purchase. And realistically, some international transactions, as well, since it will take a long time before all our payment systems are integrated to that degree.
Are they alleging that Mastercard sells data with personally identifiable information? Because if not, what’s the big deal? The people that buy this data want to know about trends.
Ask the woman and her daughter that got charged after anti abortion laws got passed and were dumb enough to use Facebook for communication.
Even assuming that MasterCard is fully intending to keep everything secure (which is impossible to guarantee), you never know how it's going to be used later on.
I mean, ffs, it's already known that multiple US agencies just buy data and use it for their purposes. It's a damn sure bet that every damn country does something similar.
De-anonymizing data is a thing. You get enough data points, and everything is right there.