Imagine stumbling across a well of oil on your property. What would your reaction be? Would you throw a party? Start firing guns in the air and screaming ‘yee-haw!’?
Most likely, your priorities would be to protect and sell it, in that order. At the very least, you’d invest considerable time in finding out your legal rights and options.
You certainly wouldn’t just hand it over to a third party, no questions asked, for free. So why do we do exactly that with our personal data? How does it relates to advertising?
“Data is the new oil.” The phrase has been for some time, but is it anything more than clichéd hyperbole?
For sure, it’s slightly sensational. Data isn’t oil, and finding a reservoir of oil in your backyard is obviously very different from generating personal data online.
But the main point still stands: why are we so careless when it comes to our (very valuable) digital information?
And data is becoming unfathomably valuable. Our personal data is the lifeblood of the internet; our digital DNA that contains all the information anyone would ever need about our online habits.
By 2020, it’s thought that each one of us will generate, on average, . Just like oil, our data is plentiful, precious, and useful. So why aren’t we taking it seriously?
Why Our Data Matters
Our data is important because, when deciphered properly, it can be used to paint a very accurate picture of our online lives. What we like, what we buy, where we spend our time.
This information is highly useful to marketers because it allows them to target ads at people who will be most likely to respond to them.
This helps achieve high conversion rates, maximizing sales and minimizing spend. Right now, though, our data is largely owned by third-party companies like Google and Facebook.
If marketers want to access our data, they have to go through these middlemen. They pay handsomely for our data, and we get nothing.
In fact, this method can even result in worse advertising. Accessing data via a third party is less accurate than getting it directly from the source (the users), and the result is that ads are often targeted inaccurately.
In other words, we’re spammed with irrelevant and annoying advertising while marketers fail to reach their desired audience. Everyone loses.
That’s annoying, but there’s an even more sinister side to this. The tech giants mentioned above aren’t particularly responsible custodians of our data.
One example of this is the Cambridge Analytica scandal, where Facebook allowed a third-party app to access a huge reservoir of users’ sensitive personal data which was then used in political campaigning.
So why do we keep allowing this to happen? And what’s the alternative?
A Better Way
One solution is to level the playing field by giving individual users the rights to their own data, and one way to achieve this is through blockchain-based initiatives.
is one project that’s changing the way we handle personal data. In their platform, content publishers can decide which advertisers they want to work with and users get to decide who uses their data.
In a blockchain-based network, there’s no need for a central point, which means users, publishers, and marketers can interact without the need for a middleman.
Users will get to choose which ads they see, and marketers will be able to target their ads more accurately.
This will allow them to shift to more friendly modes of advertising like chatbots and build more mutually rewarding relationships with users as well as content publishers.
Kind Ads have been up and running for a while now under the radar, with several big publishers already on board such as .
Advertisers can literally purchase advertising space on CMC through the Kind Ads platform. Recently, they added two big Brazilian publishers: the course creator and the relationship advice resource .
The platform is clearly expending a lot of energy into branching out and growing their list of publishers, and this looks set to carry on.
Another option is , or BAT. Their platform, also built using blockchain technology, uses its own crypto token to reward advertisers when users give their attention to certain ads.
Working alongside its own Brave browser, the system aims to provide users with a more rewarding and fair advertising experience.
A Shift in Mindset
Ultimately, though, no amount of innovative projects will help without a collective shift in the way we think about our personal information.
Data might not be exactly the same as oil, but we still need to start seeing our personal data as the valuable resource it is.
That means taking proactive steps to claim ownership of it, protect it, and actually benefit from its use in a more meaningful way than receiving clumsily targeted ads.
Blockchain is proving to be one way of doing this, and it’s a move that can benefit almost everyone. But what’s more important than any technology is education and awareness on a mass scale.
Disclaimer: This is a contributed article and should not be taken as investment advice
Disclaimer: This is a contributed article and should not be taken as investment advice
Disclaimer: This is a contributed article and should not be taken as investment advice
Disclaimer: This is a contributed article and should not be taken as investment advice
Disclaimer: This is a contributed article and should not be taken as investment advice
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