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Privacy Technology

Amazon is Offering Customers $2 Per Month For Letting the Company Monitor the Traffic on Their Phones (businessinsider.com) 64

Some Amazon users will now earn $2 dollar per month for agreeing to share their traffic data with the retail giant. From a report: Under the company's new invite-only Ad Verification program, Amazon is tracking what ads participants saw, where they saw them, and the time of day they were viewed. This includes Amazon's own ads and third-party ads on the platform. Through the program, Amazon hopes to offer more personalized-ad experiences to customers that reflect what they have previously purchased, according to Amazon.

"Your participation will help brands offer better products and make ads from Amazon more relevant,"Amazon wrote in its Shopper Panel FAQ. The $2 reward only applies to Amazon users invited to participate in the program, though customers who didn't get invited can get added to a waitlist and potentially join later, an Amazon spokesperson told Insider. The spokesperson declined to tell Insider how the company decided who to invite.

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Amazon is Offering Customers $2 Per Month For Letting the Company Monitor the Traffic on Their Phones

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  • Should a 3 more between the 2 and the decimal point.
    • by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday December 06, 2022 @03:57PM (#63108582)

      Should a 3 more between the 2 and the decimal point.

      Amazon: $0.0002 per month? Done!

    • Two dollars per ad would get me interested.
      • Wow...anyone that needs $2/month THAT bad....really needs to do some serious vocational soul searching!!!
        • I can make WAY more than that selling my blood plasma! It's nearly as effortless and a lot less intrusive!

        • by Darinbob ( 1142669 ) on Tuesday December 06, 2022 @05:15PM (#63108806)

          Given the utter intensity that high tech has become literal advertising agencies, $2/month is peanuts. According to claims about how valuable seeing even a single ad is. I don't believe all their claims, and actual profits never seem to measure up to the market cap of the companies which means that hype is more important than actual long term feasibility. Amazon survived the first dot com crash because it had an actual business model, not dependent upon advertising and hype; so the fact that they're going down the route of becoming an advertiser implies that they really need that extra 0.05% revenue stream. Now that they do all their own delivery, and same day delivery, and trying to move up the streaming service ladder, they've got a lot more costs than they used to have and they're noticing it.

        • by dbialac ( 320955 )
          That's 24 per year. That will buy you lunch a couple of times this year! With inflation going as it is, it'll buy you a lunch next year, and cover the tip in 2024.
        • Wow...anyone that needs $2/month THAT bad....really needs to do some serious vocational soul searching!!!

          It's for those who want to brag about it being a "side hustle" as they post from their parents' couch.

    • by Joce640k ( 829181 ) on Tuesday December 06, 2022 @04:35PM (#63108676) Homepage

      Should a 3 more between the 2 and the decimal point.

      You're obviously not the target demographic.

      invite-only Ad Verification program

      ie. Only the most idle, gullible, already-Amazon-addicted sector of the population.

  • 3/5ths if you get the Whole Foods Prime discount.

  • Considering how wealthy Google has gotten from knowing what I search for I'm inclined to believe that my data is worth a LOT more than that.

  • Amazon can do this? I think here in Brazil its illegal...
    • Re: (Score:2, Funny)

      by Anonymous Coward

      Yeah that’s really the biggest problem in Brazil.

  • $2 (Score:4, Funny)

    by ThurstonMoore ( 605470 ) on Tuesday December 06, 2022 @04:19PM (#63108640)

    $2 is awful cheap to be a whore.

  • non-starter (Score:4, Interesting)

    by LeadGeek ( 3018497 ) on Tuesday December 06, 2022 @04:25PM (#63108660)

    More and more I find myself trying to distance and de-couple from my smartphone. I avoid installing crapware with suspiciously-wide permissions. I run Pihole and a local ad-blocking browser (DDG browser on my phone, Ublock Origin on my Linux PC's Firefox). My truck is probably of the last generation of non-connected vehicles, and I plan to maintain it as long as possible. I hope for a renaissance of personal privacy as the masses start to wake up to the fact that not only their personal information, but their attention, and even their opinions are now market commodities. The insult of offering $2 a month to be spied upon will hopefully help at least some people realize this.

    On the other hand, I fear the likely darkness around the corner is the use of chatbot type AI to purposely further polarize the sheeple into more predictable and profitable cohorts. Discernment, independent critical thought, and personal responsibility are some of the most effective weapons we have available on the new battlefield of our very minds.

  • By "invite only" I assume they mean this offer will only apply to the sector of the population where $2 spent will get them at least $20 back.

  • It's just never enough for them.

    Never enough profits. Never enough subjugation. Never enough.

  • Fuck no. (Score:4, Funny)

    by devslash0 ( 4203435 ) on Tuesday December 06, 2022 @04:38PM (#63108696)

    Just that. Fuck no.

  • Get 1,000 old cellphones, leave them plugged in at home and running the Amazon crap but nothing else: second income!

    Of course, my real cellphone that I use for real every day will never run this shit for any amount of money, and certainly not for a measly $2: that's so cheap it's insulting, because it either means people Amazon thinks people are idiots and don't know the value of their data in 2022, or it truly values their data at $24 / year. Either way, it's insulting.

    • > Get 1,000 old cellphones, leave them plugged in at home and running the Amazon crap but nothing else: second income!

      Probably one offer per Amazon account. Otherwise, yeah, I'd get the old handsets out. Probably not worth the effort or time to read the small print.

    • Get 1,000 old cellphones, leave them plugged in at home and running the Amazon crap but nothing else: second income!

      Think big.

      Imagine running a bunch of phone emulators with their software... on some AWS instances. If you can cram enough virtual phones on an AWS server, perhaps you can exceed the monthly cost of that server, and you get Amazon to pay you for wasting their hardware.

      Yes, yes, I know they won't let you have thousands of virtual phones, but the fantasy is fun.

  • LOL (Score:4, Insightful)

    by nehumanuscrede ( 624750 ) on Tuesday December 06, 2022 @05:30PM (#63108830)

    Remember when you had to " opt-in " to let Google, AT&T and the rest of them have access to your location data on your phone ?
    Yet, magically, they somehow ended up with it anyway regardless of your decision to let them have it or not ?
    ( Not only did they end up with it, but they were selling it )

    Yeah, I suspect this is like that.

    You would be wise to assume all your data / traffic that goes across a smartphone is insecure and in someone elses hands already.
    Apply that assumption every single time you do anything on your phone ( or even take it with you ).

    • by Reziac ( 43301 ) *

      And by getting the user to agree to take payment for the user's data, they distance themselves from legal liability.

  • Require them to pay me to view their ad. You collect a fee for every add they show you. Otherwise stay off my equipment (and yes it is my hardware I paid for the damn thing unlike all those phone subsidy monthly subscriptions that somehow became legal again.)

    'Free phone on us' - oh really....
  • Through the program, Amazon hopes to offer more personalized-ad experiences to customers that reflect what they have previously purchased, according to Amazon.

    There's times where this might be helpful, like consumables. But when I spend half a year deciding on which $1700 guitar to buy, and finally pull the trigger? I really don't need to see that same guitar I already bought in my ads, exclusively, for the next two months. They already pulled that shit on me last year. Why would anyone want even *MORE* of that kind of targeted bullshit?

    I know, some yahoo is gonna scream at me that they must know what they're doing because $money, but no. Really. How does that ty

  • by Chas ( 5144 )

    Sorry. Even if they bought me the phone and was paying my bill, I wouldn't allow this.

  • I'd pay 2$ a month for them to not track any of my data at all, and leave me anonymous except for what's required for purchases via credit card.

  • They can claim that they are measuring how many ads people see, but they are actually measuring how many ads the sort of people who will install this crap see. That's a pretty good way to get higher numbers.
  • Amazon is tracking what ads participants saw

    Not unless they're tracking the user's eyes and attention. Otherwise they're simply tracking what ads were displayed.

  • by joe_frisch ( 1366229 ) on Tuesday December 06, 2022 @10:14PM (#63109350)
    I actually see this as a good thing. Amazon is admitting privacy has a value and is making an offer. Even if the offer is low, it establishes a precedent that they can't just take that information. I'm not willing to sell my personal info for $2/month, but maybe they will at some point offer more, and if not, it seems to bolster any legal case against a company that steals information.
  • To watch the encrypted traffic between me and my VPN?
    Cool!

  • Good idea, but the value of someone sharing all of their data has to be at least $1000/month. I think I just found funding for an opt-in Basic Income.

The computer is to the information industry roughly what the central power station is to the electrical industry. -- Peter Drucker

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