Quit Your Day Job In Less Then A Month! https://t.co/F6bdVVSSnd
— Daniel Spyker (@DSpyker1) February 28, 2018
from Twitter https://twitter.com/DSpyker1
February 28, 2018 at 10:34AM
via
Quit Your Day Job In Less Then A Month! https://t.co/F6bdVVSSnd
— Daniel Spyker (@DSpyker1) February 28, 2018
Does anybody know whose development is it? It happens to be very helpful if one deals with crypto.
Waiting Skeleton - Follow my tumblr for more! https://t.co/w1svDcomKf
— Daniel Spyker (@DSpyker1) February 27, 2018
#MondayMotivation brings new opportunities to succeed. Can you provide local services in your #community ? If so here's an idea from my blog at https://t.co/Avhp4DgK4s #RETWEEET #share
— Daniel Spyker (@DSpyker1) February 26, 2018
My answer to Can new blogs still earn you money in 2018? https://t.co/p8dAwwBS8I
— Daniel Spyker (@DSpyker1) February 25, 2018
Creative Way’s To Market Your Business Have you ever been in the position where you are just thinking... https://t.co/XTA9eFIHjT
— Daniel Spyker (@DSpyker1) February 24, 2018
📷 ecombiz: Earn Learn Intern (eli system) Internet marketing is the way! https://t.co/P75VJp93yH
— Daniel Spyker (@DSpyker1) February 24, 2018
unrelentingseo (u/unrelentingseo) - Reddit https://t.co/KtnNvHkd6S
— Daniel Spyker (@DSpyker1) February 24, 2018
Unrelenting SEO https://t.co/uFfVy3c4sn
— Daniel Spyker (@DSpyker1) February 24, 2018
DSpyk (@portland_success) • Instagram photos and videos - https://ww https://t.co/1RoKuK9Fgm
— Daniel Spyker (@DSpyker1) February 24, 2018
Daniel Spyker on Twitter - Grab The Free Report! https://t.co/A30mpnFd8c https://t.co/ctl5ubeCrS
— Daniel Spyker (@DSpyker1) February 23, 2018
"how do I make money online" Get my #free report walking you through step by step at https://t.co/81oF4ZNyww
— Daniel Spyker (@DSpyker1) February 23, 2018
Hi all,
Relative newcomer here, experimented with many things over the years but never gotten into PPV. I know there is still good opportunity if you're smart about it and test, test, test. Anyone have any recommendations for guides/courses for a new guy?
Thanks!
This #PresidentsDay2018 take advantage of my free training to learn #CPAmarketing Sign up at https://t.co/bzhro39Ba9 to start a #sideincome today!
— Daniel Spyker (@DSpyker1) February 19, 2018
Want Amazon Payments from #Blogging? https://t.co/0yjBFpHgRh #affiliatemarketing #makingmoney #affiliatemarketing
— Daniel Spyker (@DSpyker1) February 16, 2018
Creative Small Business Marketing https://t.co/Z8Revy0olg #blog #seo #video
— Daniel Spyker (@DSpyker1) February 12, 2018
I just uploaded a new video to @YouTube: Creative Small Business Marketing https://t.co/FYbDcYM91X
— Daniel Spyker (@DSpyker1) February 12, 2018
Creative Small Business Marketing: https://t.co/8VtQtfvGgj via @YouTube
— Daniel Spyker (@DSpyker1) February 12, 2018
I added a video to a @YouTube playlist https://t.co/8VtQtfvGgj Creative Small Business Marketing
— Daniel Spyker (@DSpyker1) February 12, 2018
Creative Marketing Idea’s For A Small Business https://t.co/bLE0P8ApCW #businessmarketing #makingmoney
— Daniel Spyker (@DSpyker1) February 12, 2018
Congrats to all the athletes participating in the #OpeningCeremonies in the #WinterOlympics Persistence does pay off especially in #business
— Daniel Spyker (@DSpyker1) February 9, 2018
I am working on setting up a personal brand where I will speak, teach and motivate accross social media platforms. This will be done in English.
Now, my official (Dutch) name is Sebastiaan Vaz (with two A's). However, I feel this will be difficult to communicate each time I have to say, for example, "Go to sebastiaanvaz.com, oh with two A's that is."
On the other hand, Sebastian Vaz just looks weird to me and does not feel like my real name. On top of that there are many other Sebastian Vaz's in the world, however very little if any Sebastiaan Vaz's.
The English version would I believe be much better to use as personal brand due to ease of communicaton and writing.
I have both .com domains, so I can use either.
What are your thoughts? It would be highly appreciated! Thanks.
Anyone have an opinion on http://driprevolution.com?
Can someone recommend me good blogs, sites or magazines that accept paid articles? The industry would be manufacturing, industrial, can be related to IT.
Also, can someone recommend good PR distribution services? I want to write a press release and have a site submit it to as many resources as possible.
Maybe someone can list services they have used with great success.
Google and Facebook's impact on our privacy cannot be understated.
76 percent of websites now contain hidden Google trackers, and 24 percent have hidden Facebook trackers, according to one study.
Gabriel Weinberg, CEO & founder of DuckDuckGo
To make any real progress in advancing data privacy this year, we have to start doing something about Google and Facebook. Not doing so would be like trying to lose weight without changing your diet. Simply ineffective.
The impact these two companies have on our privacy cannot be understated. You may know that hidden trackers lurk on most websites you visit, soaking up your personal information.
What you may not realize, though, is 76 percent of websites now contain hidden Google trackers, and 24 percent have hidden Facebook trackers, according to the Princeton Web Transparency & Accountability Project. The next highest is Twitter with 12 percent. It is likely that Google or Facebook are watching you on many sites you visit, in addition to tracking you when using their products.
As a result, these two companies have amassed huge data profiles on each person, which can include your interests, purchases, search, browsing and location history, and much more. They then make your sensitive data profile available for invasive targeted advertising that can follow you around the Internet.
This advertising system is designed to enable advance google remarketing techniques & hyper-targeting, which has many unintended consequences, such as the ability for bad actors to use the system to influence the most susceptible or to exclude groups in a way that facilitates discrimination.
"These two companies have amassed huge data profiles on each person, which can include your interests, purchases, search, browsing and location history, and much more."
Because of their entrenched positions in a wide array of Internet services, each collecting personal information that together combine into these massive digital profiles, Google and Facebook can offer hyper-targeting much better than the competition.
As a result, they now make up 63 percent of all digital advertising, and accounted for 74 percent of this market's growth in 2017, according to eMarketer. Together they form a tight digital advertising duopoly, showing no signs of abating.
Google and Facebook also use your data as input for increasingly sophisticated AI algorithms that put you in a filter bubble — an alternate digital universe that controls what you see in their products, based on what their algorithms think you are most likely to click on.
These echo chambers distort people's reality, creating a myriad of unintended consequences such as increasing societal polarization. On their unending march to profit from more and more personal information, Google and Facebook have shown little regard for all the negative consequences of their runaway algorithms.
So how do we move forward from here?
Don't be fooled by claims of self-regulation, as any useful long-term reforms of Google and Facebook's data privacy practices fundamentally oppose their core business models: hyper-targeted advertising based on more and more intrusive personal surveillance. Change must come from the outside.
Unfortunately, we've seen relatively little from Washington. Congress and federal agencies need to take a fresh look at what can be done to curb these data monopolies. They first need to demand more algorithmic and privacy policy transparency, so people can truly understand the extent of how their personal information is being collected, processed and used by these companies. Only then can informed consent be possible.
They also need to legislate that people own their own data, enabling real opt-outs. Finally, they need to restrict how data can be combined including being more aggressive at blocking acquisitions that further consolidate data power, which will pave the way for more competition in digital advertising.
Until we see such meaningful changes, consumers should vote with their feet. DuckDuckGo found that about a quarter of American adults are already taking significant actions to take back their privacy. Helping in this effort are seamless browser add-ons that will block Google and Facebook's hidden trackers across the Internet, as well as more private alternatives to their core services. I can say from my own experience, you can indeed live Google and Facebook free.
If we do nothing about Google and Facebook, we will get more of the same: more hyper-targeting, more algorithmic bias, less competition and the further erosion of collateral industries, like media. Enough is enough.
The complete loss of personal privacy in the Internet age is not inevitable. Through thoughtful regulation and increased consumer choice, we can choose a brighter path. I hope to look back at 2018 as a turning point in data privacy, where we awoke to the unacceptable implications of two companies controlling so much of our digital future.