Facebook, Google, Microsoft, and Twitter Launch the Data Transfer Project (venturebeat.com) 59
Facebook, Google, Microsoft, and Twitter have teamed up for a new open source project that strives to make it easier to transfer your data between online services. From a report: The Data Transfer Project (DTP) was officially founded last year, and there have been whisperings about it on the likes of GitHub, but the initiative was officially unveiled today with its first four members. The DTP is actively seeking other members too. The ultimate aim of the Data Transfer Project is to improve data portability, allowing users to not only download their data but transfer it directly to any other service.
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Facebook sends you a confirmation email after your data is deleted.
Whether you trust it or not is not an issue you brought up
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EU Antitrust? (Score:3)
Is this to avoid antitrust rulings such as we've seen recently against Google? If so, great. Looks like the pressure was working.
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Re:EU Antitrust? (Score:4, Interesting)
No (Score:5, Insightful)
This is four competitors who each hold siloed data about their members trying to create a giant datapool, where the each volunteer information into it and then pull information out. So all of them can serve more targetted ads. It's the admission of these four companies that they're not competing on selling ads on third party sites (Google pretty much owns that), they're selling ads on their own. Which means they all get better ad targeting and higher payouts.
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First, we just need to agree on all the standards (Score:3)
I am not making this up. See https://datatransferproject.dev/how-does-dtp-work
>> "Ideally, a Vertical will have a small number of well-defined and widely-adopted Data Models. In such a situation, the generally accepted standard will be used as the Data Model for that Vertical across companies. This is not currently the case for most Verticals because Data Models have emerged organically in a largely disconnected ecosystem."
No shit. Huh.
Re: First, we just need to agree on all the standa (Score:2, Funny)
Can I delete my data, like my porn hub account data? Not that I'd have any reason to want to get rid of that, or even an account, haha.
Re: First, we just need to agree on all the standa (Score:4, Funny)
I'd be more willing to admit to having a PornHub account than a Facebook account.
Translation: (Score:2)
If they spend enough money on R&D... (Score:2)
If these companies really try hard, they might come up with something as good as rsync or scp. Let's hope.
But you know they won't.
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Not really, you don't need to share your internal data structure. thats what interfaces are for.
An Interoperability Project (Score:2)
would be a lot more useful. Maybe you can pull your chat history out of Facebook, but unless you convinced every other person to do the same you still can't message them so how will it help you to import the history into Skype, Hangouts, etc.
Email is probably the only useful transfer here and that is Google & Microsoft only, if they actually support it...
No thanks (Score:5, Interesting)
Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)
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Oh where are the mod points when you need them. :)
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1: Facebook is lying about what they put in the report and everybody else is colluding with Facebook by saying that their reports show a lot of data.
2: Facebook has individually singled me out because I'm special for some reason and is individually manipulating my report.
3: Facebook actually has almost no data on me because i post nothi
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Data BLOCKING Project (Score:2)
How about keeping them all blind with different identities for each so you can know who sold your data to a Spammer or worse?
This will be awesome for data theft (Score:4, Insightful)
Now, when there is a security breach, there will be one standard format of personal data for criminal and intelligence agencies to process. This will streamline the process of mass identity theft and dissident profiling and improve efficiency.
The new DTP standard will no doubt include a recommended machine learning front-end to easily allow organizations to slurp up people's information in a standardized way, correlate identities across different services, and target them with advertising, thus improving advertising revenue. When users allow the 'share my data with 3rd parties' option, now there will be a standard format for the data to be shared, allowing a greater proliferation of services ready to consume it.
(Yes, this is mild sarcasm.)
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Isn't part of the standard having the data stored in a public AWS bucket?
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Yeah, I think humanity did this once already.. Standard format was called "Paper" or something. :)
But yes, you're essentially correct, we need to be careful.. I suspect that's the new social pressure that the younger generations are going to grow up with. Having to be a bit more sensible, and think a little more critically than their parents had to.
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Sarcasm? Oh, I thought this was paraphrased from the press release.
To quote Ted Ts'o (Score:3)
/dev/null (Score:2)
Solid (Score:2)
It would be more useful to own and control your data and not just transfer it from one greedy big corp to another (all of which will sell you out to the highest bidder).
Something like Tim Berners-Lee's Solid project for a decentralized web (https://github.com/solid/)
From Github:
Specifically, Solid is:
A tech stack -- a set of complementary standards and data formats/vocabularies that together provide capabilities that are currently available only through centralized social media services (think Facebook/Twit
I wouldn't mind... (Score:2)
Perhaps some motivated individual will come up with a way to use this ideal to overwrite your data on every major service with zeroes. A standard API for personal data might be a good thing, if it comes with a delete function.
This is a problem? (Score:2)