There is an electronic trail behind every single reader when they read a newspaper online, buy an eBook, or watch a video on their computer. For companies and law enforcement agencies alike, this trail is likely to be a lucrative source of new revenue as well as an increasingly important source of surveillance.
Americans are reading digital books at a rate of three out of ten.
In a market where the majority of readers are subject to both Big Publishing's greed and those of Big Tech, it is no surprise that these readers are subject to both the greed of Big Publishing and the priorities of Big Tech when it comes to accessing online textbooks or checking out the latest bestseller from the public library. In 2022, the e-reader market will be held by 72% of Kindles while the rest will be dominated by other manufacturers.
The truth is that the real product of Big Tech companies like Amazon has nothing to do with books since the real product is their technology.
Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos's secret weapon is the data that is collected from his customers. There's no doubt that Amazon's retail empire has been built on a complex network of infrastructures, and questionable working practices, but without an intricate understanding of what millions of people buy and browse every day, Amazon's success would be unimaginable.
Ever since Amazon expanded its business beyond selling books, it became obsessed with the data it was collecting on its users. As the company's chief technology officer told the BBC almost two decades ago, the company tries to gather as much information as possible from its customers so it may provide recommendations based on that information.
As Amazon has grown, so has its data collection operations. Former Amazon executives told the BBC in 2020 that their company was not only a retailer, but also a data company.
Rather than allowing Big Tech to monitor what people read and where they read them, major publishers are allowing Big Tech to monitor what they read. This includes books on sensitive topics, like if someone checks out a book about self-awareness. Worse still, they are snooping on the data that their reading habits reveal.
They can still spy on people who read digital books over the internet as long as they meet the minimum requirements of federal law.
An anti-monopoly coalition submitted a letter to Congress last week calling for a congressional hearing on reader surveillance. This is a deeply intersectional threat, according to a coalition representing civil rights, anti-surveillance, anti-book ban, racial justice, reproductive justice, and anti-monopoly interests.
There is also a report that Amazon is facing problems with regulators because of its data collection practices. Amazon’s European headquarters are based in Luxembourg, which is where data protection regulators are planning to issue a $425 million GDPR fine due to its use of people’s data, according to the Wall Street Journal on June 10.
However, Amazon officials declined to comment on the possibility of a $425 million fine. It has also been reported that anti-competition regulators will take a look at how the company utilizes data as well. The data that Amazon can collect from devices such as Ring and Alexa is becoming a more and more important backbone of government for Amazon.
Several Amazon customers have praised Amazon for its ability to safeguard their privacy and fought government demands for the data they hold. A federal grand jury in 2006 subpoenaed the company for the purchase records of 24,000 customers as part of the investigation into tax evasion; a staggeringly broad request in 2010 by the North Carolina Department of Revenue for the records of 50 million customers was a staggering result.
As a result, Amazon defeated these demands and won both cases, even though the ruling concentrated on the threat to e-commerce rather than the threat to freedom of expression in each case.
It is becoming increasingly apparent that there is a problem since there was a catastrophic launch of Google's social networking site Buzz in 2010 which shared users' contacts without their permission.
The revelation last year that Facebook still tracked users' browsing information even after they logged out is a major indication of the increasing awareness of this problem. The Obama administration announced in February 2012 that it would be pushing for all browsers to implement a "do not track" button as part of the Consumer Privacy Bill of Rights, which will ensure that users' privacy rights are protected.
Facebook was recently the target of a class-action lawsuit filed in May by plaintiffs alleging that it had collected data from its users on their online activities.
A draft communications data bill that was introduced by the government last month has caused alarm in the UK. This bill will allow the home secretary to force a wider range of service providers to store data for up to one year, raising concerns about the bill.
Although this data can be requested by the police without a warrant for "permitted purposes", including the detection of crime and the protection of the public, the police can obtain it with no warrant.