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Social Networks Businesses Government The Almighty Buck The Internet Technology

US Senators Want Social Media Firms To Tell Users How Much Their Data Is Worth (cnbc.com) 64

An anonymous reader shares a report from CNBC: A bipartisan team of senators introduced a bill Monday to require social media companies to disclose more information about the data they collect and monetize from their consumers. The Dashboard Act, which stands for Designing Accounting Safeguards to Help Broaden Oversight And Regulations on Data, aims to help consumers understand the price of using social media services that are free on face value. The bill seeks to require "commercial data operators" with more than 100 million monthly active users to disclose the type of data they collect from users and give them "an assessment of the value of that data," according to a press release announcing the bill. It also would require the companies to file an annual report disclosing third-party contracts involving data collection and give users the right to delete some or all of their collected data.
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US Senators Want Social Media Firms To Tell Users How Much Their Data Is Worth

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  • The IRS wants to know so they can send you a bill.

  • "The Dashboard Act, which stands for Designing Accounting Safeguards to Help Broaden Oversight And Regulations on Data, "

    • No, it's fairly common. Most government projects and bills do the same thing, come up with a cute name and backronym it. The most famous result is the Patriot Act (officially, the USA Patriot Act, in case you were worried the US government was supporting Libya or something.). USA Patriot Act is technically (and legally) an acronym for " Uniting and Strengthening America by Providing Appropriate Tools Required to Intercept and Obstruct Terrorism " Personally, I think the USA part is unnecessary both as p

  • Easy calculation? (Score:4, Interesting)

    by ranton ( 36917 ) on Monday June 24, 2019 @11:56PM (#58818800)

    Facebook made about $55 billion in revenue last year with about 2.38 billion active monthly users. So it looks like the average user's data is worth about $2 per month. If you look instead at profit that would be just under $1 per month per user. Very active users are obviously worth a bit more, and those who rarely use Facebook are worth far less.

    Not exactly sure why we need a solution like this when it isn't that hard to identify the value of your data to these companies.

    • Facebook made about $55 billion in revenue last year with about 2.38 billion active monthly users. So it looks like the average user's data is worth about $2 per month.

      Since this is a U.S. bill, shouldn't we only be looking at U.S. figures?

      https://s21.q4cdn.com/399680738/files/doc_financials/2018/Q4/Q4-2018-Earnings-Presentation.pdf

      Facebook doesn't break out their Average Revenue Per User for the U.S. by itself. They combine the U.S. and Canada. ARPU for 2018 was:

      1Q 2018 = $23.59
      2Q 2018 = $25.91
      3Q 2018 = $27.61
      4Q 2018 = $34.86

      Total = $111.97

      That works out to roughly $9.33 per user per month.

      • That works out to roughly $9.33 per user per month.

        Some of that will be legitimate, i.e. ads shown on Facebook. I'm guessing an ad shown in people's Facebook feeds is quite expensive.

    • So, the obvious reason we need this bill is: (1) Most people aren't going to seek out the data, and should be encouraged to think about the value of their data. (2) An average, esp. a global average, is meaningless. Partially because of location (you see another response points out your number is likely off by a multiple of 5), but more importantly because averages are really meaningless in this situation. (3) Revenue and the value of the data are very different. For instance, serving ads is not selling d

    • Facebook made about $55 billion in revenue last year with about 2.38 billion active monthly users.

      Most of those users are in the 3rd World, and (currently) have little value for Facebook. In advertising revenue, a user in America is worth 10 times as much a user in India.

    • Facebook made about $55 billion in revenue last year with about 2.38 billion active monthly users. So it looks like the average user's data is worth about $2 per month.

      That's an overly-high estimate. It assumes that all of the value of Facebook's operations derives from user data, but running an advertising business requires a lot more than just having data on which to make targeting decisions. To correctly estimate the value of the user data, you have to work out what Facebook's ad revenue would be if it did its advertising without user data.

  • by phalse phace ( 454635 ) on Tuesday June 25, 2019 @12:21AM (#58818860)

    The bill seeks to require "commercial data operators" with more than 100 million monthly active users to disclose the type of data they collect from users and give them "an assessment of the value of that data"

    Facebook reports what each person's data is worth every quarter. They call it ARPU, Average Revenue Per User.

    For the U.S. and Canada, it was $30.12 last quarter.

    For Europe, it was $9.55

    For Asia-Pacific, it was $2.78

    Facebook Q1 2019 Results [q4cdn.com]

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      For the U.S. and Canada, it was $30.12 last quarter.

      For Europe, it was $9.55

      I wonder why the huge disparity. Could be EU privacy laws blocking some of their abusive revenue streams, could be lower engagement, could be stricter advertising rules. Or maybe Europeans just buy less stuff.

      • I think all of the above. I don't think the privacy rules are the only factor, the privacy awareness is another one. However, the apocalypse of facebook-browsing zombies is affecting Europe as well.
        • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

          I get the impression that the Cambridge Analytica scandal was much bigger news here than in the US. We actually had real-world adverts from Facebook trying to make us trust them again, it was that bad.

      • by GuB-42 ( 2483988 )

        GDP per capita is about 50% higher in the US than in the EU. And the difference is likely to be higher if we include non-EU European countries.
        Also, taxes tend to be higher in Europe, more regulations, more protection. Culture too. Facebook is an american company, so it fits the american culture better, that includes language. Some Facebook products may also be only available in the US. I think Europeans also tend to use ad blockers a bit more.

  • The reason personal data is so valuable is that there is a large number of voyeurs willing to pay for it.
    They are placed high enough in their respective corporations to make purchasing decisions and will gladly dispense company cash to satisfy their personal curiosity about other people's lifes.
    How many of those who buy personal data do really know what to do with it to improve their products? To actually "serve the customerr better" ?
    They do it to feel personally empowered, and as long as there is demand

  • "Your info is worth maybe 10 cents."

    Never mind that they use a list of personal data to serve millions of dollars of ads.

    • Ads are expensive. Just the spying knowledge to know exactly which worked on who, with the ability to send the right manipulation to the right audience is very valuable.
  • by sabbede ( 2678435 ) on Tuesday June 25, 2019 @08:01AM (#58820048)
    A. It's dumb.

    B. It's pointless.

    C. Just because A&B also describe the bulk of our legislators doesn't mean it should apply to how we name bills.

  • 'nuff sed.

    Seriously, why not pay people for the data they supply?
    Oh, right.
    "Business model" and all that.

    Silly me.

  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • They should pay us royalties!
  • If—instead of those useless GDPR shenanigans—they showed me how much ad revenue my visit /would/ generate with ads and trackers enabled, i'd disable my ad blocker and pay that amount +100% premium to disable the ads and trackers.

He has not acquired a fortune; the fortune has acquired him. -- Bion

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