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    Back to To the Point

    To the Point

    The Downside of Data Mining

    Your personal data's all over the Internet, and it's up for sale. Data mining is now big business, with some 4000 companies searching everything all of us do on line, looking for patterns and compiling lists for sale to marketers, financial institutions and perspective employers -- a nd don't forget about the NSA.

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    By Warren Olney • Oct 21, 2014 • 1 min read

    Your personal data's all over the Internet, and it's up for sale. Data mining is now big business, with some 4000 companies searching everything all of us do on line, looking for patterns and compiling lists for sale to marketers, financial institutions and perspective employers -- and don't forget about the NSA. It might be secretly mining even the data of its own corporate partners. If you've just applied for a warranty or googled somebody else's chronic disease, you could be on a list of bad credit risks or unsuitable employees. If the information is wrong, there's not much you can do to correct it, because it's secret and there's almost no regulation.

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      Warren Olney

      former KCRW broadcaster

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      Claire Martin

      Producer, To the Point/Which Way LA?

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      Kareem Maddox

      Three-on-three basketball player in the final stages of qualifying for Olympics; former KCRW intern

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      Sonya Geis

      Senior Managing Editor

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      Elizabeth Dwoskin

      Silicon Valley correspondent for the Washington Post

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      Frank Pasquale

      University of Maryland

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      Eric Siegel

      Predictive Analytics World

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