Eaten alive by Google

James Whittaker wrote in his blog, why he left Google as an employee. It seems like the formerly innovative technology pioneer has turned into a company with a mission. The mission to spy in our privacy. Since Google is part of our daily life, it is rather easy for them to learn much about us. Openly we are telling Google, what we would like to know about via their search function. The rest, our location, technical details about our computer, our online accounts, and purchases is easy to get. Connecting these bits and pieces of information over a longer period of time, gives a complete picture about everyone’s life. The friends we have, the working hours, spare time, sleeping hours, and holidays are transparent to them. Spying even intrudes our mobile phones. They know whom we call and how long we speak.

With every Google search, they transmit 700kB highly streamlined javascript code to do this job on our computers. This code is made very efficiently and difficult to understand for a human. With a network protocol analyzer, I checked the transmitted packages during a Google search. Even though I spend a couple of hours with that, I failed in both cases, understanding their javascript code as well as the transmitted data.

Handling this avalanche of data is an impressive performance, and these fantastic computer scientists at Google deserve my deepest respect. What is more obvious than creating their own browser, Google Chrome, to handle that more efficiently?

For many years the threat exists, that online companies know too much about us. In 2008 even the German department of constitution warned users about Chrome browser’s data collection mania, behind the users back. In March 2012 Google has changed its privacy policy. While reading Google Chrome Privacy Notice I am shocked, how much data are already exchanged, even when I only start the browser.

Here are a few suggestions to circumvent the worst. I don’t want to allow them to run javascript on my computer and I want to keep it my secret, on which hit I click. When javascript is switched on in your web-browser, you can not easily see that you transmit data, when you follow a link. When javascript is off, the search results are links to a Google server, that forwards you to the intended web page, after collecting your data. You can see that, when you mouse over the links of their hits. To re-gain some minimal privacy, I use Firefox and some helpful plugins:

1. YesScript is a javascript blocker for specific web-sites. I entered all different Google pages from apis.google.com, over google.at/.de/.com until 1e100.org with both protocols, http and https.

2. I use FoxReplace to remove the Google brackets, the transmission of the clicked hits. Here is my regular expression for the FoxReplace settings: replace “/url\?q=(.*?)&.*?” with $1, as well as others to replace the url-encodings. If you want to know more details, let me know.

I know that this does not help much. At least it is more difficult for Google and others to spy on me. I also delete my browser’s history and my collected cookies from time to time. Sometimes I even consider to use Bing.com. One day I will be able to give a more detailed report about Google privacy intrusion, with the help of others, I hope.

Posted in Netlife | 1 Comment

Who is a VIP?

Last week I got an invitation from a large clothes shop named Peek & Cloppenburg. I have a loyalpeek & cloppenburg VIP1ty card for a couple of years and I am buying clothes there from time to time. Now they are offering a 20% discount when I come to a shopping center close to Vienna on a weekday evening to the so called VIP-Shopping night.

In the last couple of years all large chains of shops developed their loyalty programms. More and more they switched from the habbit of competitive prices for everybody, to acceptable prices for frequent customers, who are willing to participate in their loyalty program. Everybody else pays more and doesn’t benefit from their additional goodies like annual refund, vouchers, or special offers for a limited time or part of their products.

Today it is very easy to loose overview of all the different offers. This is exactly what they have in mind: Diversification is the well proven strategy to make more money. For me as a customer, life is more complicated. If I don’t want to spend much more money for peek & cloppenburg VIP2the same product, I have to spend a lot of time comparing the different offers. I have to buy things, when they are on sale and not when I actually need them. My relationship to these shops and their image is suffering from this kind of marketing. The economy is not the supplier for goods to support the customers interest anymore. They are more and more focused on earning more money, even by abusing the normal customer like you and me.

Peek and Cloppenburg call me a VIP. They offer 20% price reduction, music, and champaign. They ask for an online registration, to connect my web browser on my computer with my customer ID. I am hard-boiled enough to understand that they are not my friends, and that they want my satisfaction about the deal only, because I might return later to buy more. Old fashined properties like trust, a personal relationship, honesty, and loyalty don’t count anymore, as long as it can not be turned into revenue.

I get so angry, when I see this >50% lower sale prices. Then I know, how overpriced it has been before. In another field, flight tickets, they use similar methods. In a TV spot I learn how stupid I was to pay too much for a flight ticket (Btw: I almost always pay at least as much as the stupid passenger). This is the motivation to participate in this game under the rules of large corporations.

The development described here, is neither good for the employee nor for the customer. I have to spend my free time and some employees have to act contrary to their moral certainty. Structural changes in economy, from small family business to word-wide corporations are responsible for this switch. It becomes more difficult to act against this 21st century dogma. We, the people, are loosing control. The individual interests are sacrified for a better streamlined and developed economy, that is focused on their profits and by doing so, gets even more powerful.

Posted in Shopping | 1 Comment

Reasons for this blog

In the last couple of month, I realized how much our daily life is negatively influenced by large enterprises.

  • There was an article in the German magazin “Der Spiegel” about sugar, that shows that the food industry is not providing proper nutrition but destroying our health for profit.
  • The discounts in customer loyalty programs, show how much these companies are earning, even with significant prize reductions. By establishing much too high prizes, they transfer wealth from normal citizens and create undesireable and uncontrollable power.
  • While using Google, we are subject of intensive spying in our private life. 700kB of scripts are provided with every Google search, which make sure that any utilizable information is transmitted back to Google.

It is difficult to escape from these potential threats. In this blog I try to find ways out of this (potential) misery.

Posted in Conspiracy | 5 Comments