The recent questioning of the heads of Amazon, Facebook, Google and Apple in the US Congress has highlighted the  threat  their practices pose to our privacy and democracy.

However these big four companies are only part of a vast, sophisticated system of mass surveillance.

In this network are thousands of data brokers, ad agencies and technology companies – some of them Australian. They harvest data from  millions of people, often without their explicit consent or knowledge.

Currently, this includes data related to the COVID-19 pandemic. For instance, data giant Palantir has provided  lab test results and emergency department statuses  to the US Centres for Disease Control and Prevention.

How much do they know?

Data companies gather data about our online activity, location,  DNA, health and even how we  use our mouse. They use a range of techniques, such as:

This expansive tracking generates  billions of data points  that can reveal every facet of our lives including our family status, income, political affiliation, interests, friendships and sexual orientation.

Data companies use this information to compile detailed individual consumer profiles. These are used for purposes such as  targeting us with ads, determining our  eligibility for loans  and assessing the  riskiness of our lives.

The data industry in Australia

Some of the world’s largest data companies operate in Australia. Quantium is an Australian data analytics firm that acquires data from various partners including NAB, Qantas, Woolworths (which owns 50% of the company) and Foxtel.

These partnerships  allow Quantium to  “tap into the consumer data ecosystem with an unrivalled picture of the behaviours of more than 80% of Australian households, spanning banking, household and retail transactions”.

A company spokesperson told The Conversation most of its work is “data science and AI (artificial intelligence) work with first-party de-identified data supplied by the client”. From this, Quantium delivers “insights and AI/decision support tools” for clients.

Anonymised or “de-identified” data can still be  accurately re-identified. Even if a person’s details are de-identified by being converted to an alphanumeric code, the conversion method is identical across most companies.

Therefore, each code is unique to an individual and can be used to  identify them  within the digital data ecosystem.

A lack of transparency

With a revenue of more than  US$110 million  last year, the insights from Quantium’s data seem to be proving valuable.

From this revenue, more than  A$61 million between 2012 and 2020  came from projects commissioned by the Australian government. This includes two 2020 engagements:

  • a “COVID-19 Data Analytics” project worth more than A$10 million with a contract period from March 17, 2020 to December 31, 2020
  • a “Quantium Health Data Analytics” project valued at more than A$7.4 million with a contract period from July 1, 2020 to June 30, 2021.

Quantium’s spokesperson said they could not discuss the details of the contracts without government approval.

In the past decade, the Australian government has commissioned dozens of projects to other data analytics firms worth more than A$200 million.

These include a A$13.8 million Debt Recovery Service project with  Dun & Bradstreet  and a A$3.3 million National Police Checks project with  Equifax  – both started in 2016. It’s unclear what and how much data has been shared for these projects.

Last year, Quantium was one of several larger companies  put on notice by Australia’s consumer watchdog  for sharing data with third parties without consumers’ knowledge or consent.

How do they work?

Data companies largely operate in the shadows. We rarely know who has collected information about us, how they use it, who they give it to, whether it’s correct, or how much money is being made from it.

LiveRamp (formerly Acxiom) is a US-based company partnered with Australia’s Nine Entertainment Co.  This partnership  allows the Nine Network to give marketers access to online and offline data to target consumers across Nine’s digital network.

This data may include the Australian electoral roll, to which LiveRamp  gained access last year.

Similarly, Optum is a US-based health data company that  collects information  from hospital records, electronic health records and insurance claims.

It has data on  more than 216 million people  and used this to develop a predictive algorithm that was shown to  discriminate against black patients.

Compromising our democracy

The prevalence, scope and stealth of the abovementioned data practices are not congruent with the basic principles of a liberal democracy.

According to philosopher Isaiah Berlin, liberal democracies can only thrive if they have autonomous citizens with  two types of freedoms:

  1. freedom to  freely speak, choose and protest
  2. freedom from  undue inspection and intervention.

Our data-driven world signals an extreme diminishing of both these freedoms. Our freedom of choice is harmed when our informational environments are doctored to nudge us towards  behaviours that benefit other parties.

Our private space is all but gone in a digital environment where everything we do is recorded, processed and used by commercial and governmental entities.

How can we protect ourselves?

Although our ability to disconnect from the digital world and control our data is  eroding rapidly, there are still  steps we can take  to protect our privacy.

We should focus on implementing legislation to protect our civil liberties. The Australian  Consumer Data Right  and  Privacy Act  stop short of ensuring the appropriate data protections. The Australian Competition and Consumer Commission highlighted this in its  2019 report.

In 2014, the US Federal Trade Commission  recommended  legislation to allow consumers to identify which brokers have data about them – and that they be able to access it.

It also recommended:

  • brokers be required to reveal their data sources
  • retailers disclose to consumers that they share their data with brokers
  • consumers be allowed to opt out.

If we care about our freedoms, we should try to ensure similar legislation is introduced in Australia.

Written by Uri Gal. Republished with permission of The Conversation.