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Meta charging European users to remove ads is a privacy red herring

This article was originally published on The Conversation, an independent and nonprofit source of news, analysis and commentary from academic experts. Disclosure information is available on the original site.

This article was originally published on The Conversation, an independent and nonprofit source of news, analysis and commentary from academic experts. Disclosure information is available on the original site.

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Author: Ignacio Cofone, Associate professor, Law, McGill University

This November, Meta rolled out a new subscription model for Facebook and Instagram users in the European Union, where they could pay a fee in exchange for an ad-free browsing experience on Facebook and Instagram. Referred to by critics as a 鈥淧ay or Okay鈥 model, and charging 9.99 to 12.99 euros monthly, the option is already an object of controversy.

Meta, among many others, presented the new policy as a privacy-preserving measure. Meta explains it responds to EU privacy regulations.

And opponents of this approach only partially disagree. The Austrian Data Protection Authority, together with activist and lawyer Max Schrems and the advocacy group NOYB, filed a complaint against Meta鈥檚 new model. They argue that paying for privacy breaches privacy as a fundamental right.

The European Consumer Organisation also filed an equivalent complaint. Asking to pay for privacy is wrong, the complaint argues, and asking to pay so much for it is worse.

But both those who are excited about privacy-preserving Facebook and Instagram versions, and the organizations that filed these complaints, miss the point: Meta doesn鈥檛 provide any option to pay for privacy 鈥 in the EU or anywhere else.

Meta鈥檚 business model relies on personal data

The issue is that users who choose the new option still have their information collected by Meta. The company declared that people who pay for the service will not have their information processed for renting advertising spots on their accounts. It never promised that they wouldn鈥檛 have their information collected or processed for other purposes.聽

Meta鈥檚 objective isn鈥檛 just to display ads to many people but also to make its ads more effective through precise targeting. To do this, Meta collects information about its users, from their location and likes to their browsing outside of the platform.聽

Meta鈥檚 most valuable resource isn鈥檛 your attention while you use Facebook for an hour or two, but what the accumulation of thousands of those hours provides. Your attention is valuable for a second, but your information is useful forever; Meta can predict how likely a user is to buy a product when others with similar demographics clicked on it before.

It is unlikely that Meta will offer pay-for-privacy because it would lose enormous profits from advertisers if it stopped collecting data from paying users. If it did that and EU users opted for a payment-supported Facebook as opposed to an ad-supported one, it would miss out on ad accuracy for its non-EU users too. The monthly payments received would be unlikely to compensate for that large loss.

An additional revenue stream

Avoiding ads can make scrolling through Facebook and Instagram more enjoyable, but paying to avoid them doesn鈥檛 change Meta鈥檚 privacy problem. The privacy problem with Meta鈥檚 business model isn鈥檛 that it shows ads but rather what it does to make them valuable: collecting personal information and subjecting it to Meta鈥檚 data practices.

Although ads are the public face of Meta鈥檚 business model, the real profit and potential harms lie in its data practices. Renting ad spots generates revenue, but the heart of both Meta鈥檚 business model and its privacy problem is what it does to improve them. In that context, Facebook鈥檚 paid version is an additional revenue stream rather than a commitment to more ethical data practices or a breach of fundamental rights.

A more pleasant, ad-free browsing experience is a convenience that, in fact, may increase the amount of time people spend on the platform, allowing for more personal data to be collected.

Beyond Facebook

Facebook is one example of a ubiquitous business model in the information economy.聽

The real cost of services in the information economy isn鈥檛 their monthly fee. Whether we send money to paid services that also collect our data like Amazon Prime, Netflix, Spotify and Uber, or we instead see ads, doesn鈥檛 change our harm exposure. There鈥檚 nothing wrong, from a privacy perspective, with paying to remove ads. What entities do with our data poses long-term risks beyond our immediate browsing experience.

So users who opt for paid alternatives aren鈥檛 exempt from most of the cost. The Cambridge Analytica scandal, where personal information from millions was exploited for political purposes, illustrates one of the long-term risks of data accumulation. Facebook鈥檚 data practices had consequences far beyond ad targeting. The risk of data misuse and data breaches grows as more information is gathered.

More robust rules

Ultimately, it鈥檚 not the ads, but the way companies obtain, use, and share personal data that needs attention and reform. Relying on individual users to opt out, whether paying or for free, is insufficient. It places the burden on each of them to navigate complicated and technical yet ambiguous privacy settings on countless platforms.聽

Rather than by supporting or opposing new options to pay to avoid targeted ads, the way to reduce harm in the data economy is to develop more robust rules to govern the collection and processing of people鈥檚 data. Useful protections are those that apply regardless of what options users click.

The takeaway from the controversy shouldn鈥檛 be to stop the new 鈥 and currently Meta-specific 鈥 business model in which people can pay for ad removal. Rather, it should be to stop the old, internet-wide, business model in which companies collect and use people鈥檚 data with insufficient commitments to keep them safe.

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Ignacio Cofone does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

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This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Disclosure information is available on the original site. Read the original article: https://theconversation.com/meta-charging-european-users-to-remove-ads-is-a-privacy-red-herring-218893

Ignacio Cofone, Associate professor, Law, McGill University, The Conversation

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