Google, Facebook business models threaten people's rights: Amnesty report
The
data-collection
business model fuelling Facebook and Google represents a threat to
human rights around the world, Amnesty International said in a report
Wednesday.
The
organization argued that offering people free online services and
then using information about them to target money-making ads imperils
a gamut of rights including freedom of opinion and expression.
"Despite
the real value of the services they provide, Google and Facebook's
platforms come at a systemic cost," Amnesty said in its report,
"Surveillance Giants."
"The
companies' surveillance-based business model forces people to make a
Faustian bargain, whereby they are only able to enjoy their human
rights online by submitting to a system predicated on human rights
abuse."
With
ubiquitous surveillance, the two online giants are able to collect
massive amounts of data which may be used against their customers,
according to the London-based human rights group.
The
business model is "inherently incompatible with the right to
privacy," Amnesty contended. The report maintained that the two
Silicon Valley firms have established "near-total dominance over
the primary channels through which people connect and engage with the
online world," giving them unprecedented power over people's
lives. Read
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