By Paul Taylor
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19 Dec, 2019
The author is Paul Taylor CEO and co-founder of Fabric . What is the meaning of Social Fabric? It is the bond which people share together and helps to form a culturally rich and socially cohesive community. Unfortunately, our social fabric in 2019 continues to be challenged and ripped apart… With the growth of search and social media over the past decade, dominated by the Facebook-Google Duopoly, consumer digital surveillance on and off these platforms has become a dangerous and potent side-effect impacting people around the globe. Facebook-Cambridge Analytica Scandal The Facebook data breach impacting 87 Million Consumer Facebook accounts by Cambridge-Analytica – a data analysis firm - that worked on President Trump’s 2016 and Brexit campaigns – exposed the public to the severity of this surveillance. Data is the new digital oil, and the companies that wield the power are the ones that harvest the most, and the highest quality data – think Facebook, Google, Amazon, Netflix. Every time we share, search, shop, and watch content – data is harvested about you and your network and sold or shared to third parties to send targeted advertising. Cambridge taught us that our personal data in the hands of sophisticated people with the right algorithms can wield tremdous influence and power. Furthermore, these data analytics firms can be hired by those that might otherwise not be caught dead with their hands on the smoking gun to potentially influence elections and the very due process of democracy. 2020 Presidential Elections With the 2020 Presidential elections around the corner, and with the presidential incumbents once again maneuvering for advantage, we are reminded of the importance of owning, and controlling our data and the tremendous influence that digital advertising and target ads have on our perception not only of these candidates, but also of the perception of society and the important issues at hand. I am reminded of a quote from Yuri Orlov from the 2005 movie – Lord of War. Yuri responds to Jack Valentine, the FBI Agent holding him for being an illegal arms smuggler. Yuri Orlov: Tell me I’m everything you despise. That I’m the personification of evil. That I’m what – responsible for the breakdown of the fabric of society and world order. I’m a one-man genocide. Say everything you want to say to me now. Because you don’t have long. Jack Valentine: Are you crazy? Or just plain delusional? I don’t think you fully appreciate the seriousness of your situation… Yuri Orlov: I do rub shoulders with some of the most vile, sadistic men calling themselves leaders today (hmm.. thinking about Trump). But some of those men are the enemies of your enemies. And while the biggest arms dealer in the world is your boss, the President of the United States, who ships more merchandise in one year than I do in a year…sometimes it’s embarrassing to have his fingerprints on the guns. Sometimes he needs a freelancer like me to supply forces he can’t be seen supplying. So…you call me evil. But unfortunately for you, I’m a necessary evil. I’m thinking Andrew Wheaton probably felt a little bit like Yuri Orlov. What lesson have we learned from this scandal?? Firstly, our every digital move is being tracked from the websites and apps we visit, content we share on social media, what we purchase, who we speak with, to where we travel and what we visit. This surveillance and data Collection occurs both online and offline. Secondly, Search and Social Media Gatekeepers leverage OUR personal data to make huge amounts of money. Most importantly, YOUR data is not safe. We have virtually NO say in how our personal information is used once they collect it, where it goes after, and who gets to view it, and more importantly how they make money from it. Facebook’s Portal Device With Christmas around the corner, I am reminded everyday of the dangers of surveillance capitalism. Companies like Facebook, Google, Amazon have upped their surveillance game in time for the holidays with their in home surveillance devices. Seeing Facebook market their Portal Device with seemingly innocuous Muppet characters is yet another example of the relentless and perverse nature of these corporation and their need to collect personal data to generate revenues using targeted advertising. George Orwell, author of the popular dystopian novel – 1984 – must be rolling around in his grave about this modern-day parable of having surveillance devices in our homes. Big Brother is alive and well. His name is Mark Zuckerberg. Enter Fabric. Fabric is a data marketplace designed to bring trust and transparency to digital advertising and put digital identity and data back in the hands of the people, where it belongs. Helping people regain their digital identity, own their data, keep it safe and monetize it. Blockchain – Decentralized Data Marketplace Fabric is a blockchain based advertising marketplace that solves for ad fraud by creating a micro-economy for personal data and positions the user in a position to own, control and monetize their data. The Fabric protocol treats every instance of a view, share, search as micro-transaction between two verified parties – advertisers and users – where an exchange of value occurs if the smart contract based on Proof-of-Value (Pov) is satisfied. This means registered users on Fabric get fair compensation from a portion of the $250 Billion spent annually on digital advertising. Advertisers create a value-chain that includes the consumer, with no interference from middle-man gatekeepers like Facebook or Google. Users are compensated fairly for their data by consenting to allow Brands to access their data, and for providing high quality first-party data. This allows Fabric to be the source of high-quality data. We are advocates of both public and private blockchains. At Fabric, we make user’s data privacy and data security paramount. Every micro-transaction is recorded on a public chain where advertisers can audit the entire advertising funnel and track every data block written for every advertising dollar spent. This creates 100% transparency. Consumer data is recorded on a private chain where only the consumer has access to the private key to decrypt this data or transfer. This makes data ownership a “third-first amendment” right. Data as Personal Property Companies like Humanity ( www.humanity.co ) are also championing this fight for data as personal property. We are encouraged to see data as a personal right as one of the main campaign promises of Andrew Yang – the democratic incumbent – running for President in 2020. Fabric – Debit Card Fabric has integrated the consumer data marketplace with third-party payment providers to enable registered users to transfer a portion of their earnings into their bank account. We will also be introducing a Fabric debit card (similar to Venmo) in Q1 / 2020 that gives registered users the ability to carry their balance with them and use it to pay for everyday items. The days of converting a “like” or “view” or your data into real world currency that You can use to pay for an uber ride or buy groceries is upon us with Fabric. Join the Fabric Marketplace and take back control of your data! __________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Click here to register for Fabric’s security offering and learn more about how we are making this vision a reality.