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PayPal also collects personal data by putting cookies, web beacons (“to identify our users and user behavior”), and “similar technologies” on your device so that you can be tracked 24/7 even if you’re not using PayPal’s services, and even if you’re not on any of its sites.

Wait, “similar technologies?” By clicking on another link, you find out that they include pernicious “flash cookies,” newfangled “HTML 5 cookies,” and undefined “other web application software methods.” Unlike cookies, they “can operate across all of your browsers.” And you can’t get rid of these spy technologies or block them through your browser the way you get rid of or block cookies. You have to jump through hoops to deal with them, if they can be dealt with at all.

In addition, PayPal sweeps up any information “from or about you in other ways,” such as when you contact customer support and tell them stuff, or when you respond to a survey (Just Say No), or when you interact “with members of the eBay Inc. corporate family or other companies.” Yup, it sweeps up information even when you interact with other companies!

It may also “obtain information about you from third parties such as credit bureaus and identity verification services.” And it may “evaluate your computer, mobile phone or other access device to identify any malicious software or activity.” So they’re snooping around your devices.

And when you download or use PayPal’s apps to your smartphone, or access its “mobile optimized sites,” it collects location data along with a host of other data on your mobile device, including the unique identifier that ties it to you personally in order to manipulate search results and swamp you with location-based advertising “and other personalized content,” or whatever.

After vacuuming up all this information “from or about you,” PayPal will then “combine your information with information we collect from other companies” and create a voluminous, constantly growing dossier on you that you will never be able to check into.

Who all gets your personal information that PayPal collects? You guessed it.

First, it defines “personal information.” Turns out, much of your personal information is not “personal information”: any information that PayPal has “made anonymous” – we already know how anonymous that really is – is not “personal information,” and thus can be freely shared with or sold to whomever. And it shares the remaining “personal information” with: •eBay and its affiliates •Contractors that “help with,” among other things, “marketing and technology services” •Financial outfits (such as GE Capital) that help decide, for example, if you should receive pre-approved credit-card offers •Credit bureaus and collection agencies, which get your account information •Companies PayPal might merge with or be acquired by. There goes your entire dossier. You can’t stop it from being sold to the new entity, which might be a Chinese company. •A basket of our favorite law enforcement and government agencies and “other third parties pursuant to a subpoena, court order, or other legal process….”

You can’t opt out of PayPal’s spy apparatus.

You can only opt out of receiving their ads and pitches. And activating that “do not track” function in your browser to keep PayPal off your back? No way José. “We do not currently respond to DNT signals,” it says laconically.

So, if you don’t like being surveilled like that, you’re still free to close your PayPal account. But that’s not going to wipe out the information PayPal has collected “from or about you,” and its automatic systems continues to collect data through cookies, beacons, and “similar technologies,” and through the sophisticated spy capabilities that are part of any smartphone worth its salt [hilarious video.... iPhone 5nSa].

PayPal will simply mark your account as “closed” and you can’t get into it anymore, but it will “retain personal information from your account for a certain period of time” – probably forever – to do all sorts things, including “take other actions as required or permitted by law.” Yup, as permitted by law. It won’t do anything illegal with it. That’s the only promise. Alas, there aren’t exactly a lot of legal restrictions in the US on what companies can do with personal data.

PayPal is not unique. They’re all doing it. They’re part of the enormously hyped bubble of Big Data whose business model is to collect and monetize your personal information, which has become part of a new asset class. And seeing this, the NSA is dying of data envy.

But government agencies are already on a roll with off-the-shelf surveillance technologies, and they justify them with peculiar rationales: According to the LA Police Department, anyone driving a car in the greater Los Angeles Metropolitan area is automatically part of a vast criminal investigation!

1 posted on 06/27/2014 8:22:43 AM PDT by MNDude
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To: MNDude

They are probably ALL doing that: Google, PayPal, Microsoft, Oracle, Yahoo, eBay, you name it!! Plus the United Surveillance States of America: USSA.


2 posted on 06/27/2014 8:31:48 AM PDT by 2harddrive
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To: MNDude

Will that be Paypal or credit card? Not a pleasant choice to have to make - I still prefer Paypal.


3 posted on 06/27/2014 8:32:30 AM PDT by expat1000
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To: MNDude
Face it. Nothing you do on the internet is "private" in the old sense of the word.

Once you accept this truth, you'll either unplug, modify your online behavior, or quit worrying about it.

4 posted on 06/27/2014 8:43:53 AM PDT by Leroy S. Mort
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To: MNDude
Wow. They track everything technically possible (just like Google). I haven't studied the new HTML 5 tracking beacons yet - looks like that gets bumped up on my to-do list.

I've had eBay pages following me since my son looked up a particular Pokémon card. That specific card keeps popping up in my Facebook timeline.

5 posted on 06/27/2014 8:53:19 AM PDT by uncommonsense (Liberals see what they believe; Conservatives believe what they see.)
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To: MNDude

I tend to appreciate advertising attenuated to my interests. I wasn’t born in a cave and I do not live in one. No one knows me better than my Creator. All these powerful data entities have nothing on Him, but are at His service whether they know it or not.


6 posted on 06/27/2014 9:19:51 AM PDT by Fester Chugabrew (Even the compassion of the wicked is cruel.)
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To: MNDude

>> According to the LA Police Department, anyone driving a car in the greater Los Angeles Metropolitan area is automatically part of a vast criminal investigation!

Daily routine life IS a criminal activity and therefor must be investigated, got it. /s


7 posted on 06/27/2014 9:42:12 AM PDT by Ray76 (True change requires true change - A Second Party ...or else it's more of the same...)
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To: MNDude

>>PayPal also collects personal data by putting cookies, web beacons (“to identify our users and user behavior”), and “similar technologies” on your device so that you can be tracked 24/7 even if you’re not using PayPal’s services, and even if you’re not on any of its sites. <<

MRU Blaster and C Cleaner will remove them.


9 posted on 06/27/2014 10:25:16 AM PDT by B4Ranch (Name your illness, do a Google & YouTube search with "hydrogen peroxide". Do it and be surprised.)
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