Why you should get paid for your data | Jennifer Zhu Scott

78,179 views ・ 2020-03-19

TED


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

00:13
I grew up in the late '70s in rural China
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during the final years of my country's pursuit of absolute equality
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at the expense of liberty.
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At that time, everybody had a job,
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but everyone was struggling.
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In the early '80s, my dad was an electrician,
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and my mom worked two shifts in the local hospital.
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But still, we didn't have enough food,
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and our living conditions were dismal.
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We were undoubtedly equal --
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we were equally poor.
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The state owned everything.
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We owned nothing.
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The story I'm going to share with you is about my struggles
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of overcoming adversity
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with my resilience, grit and sheer determination.
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No, I'm just kidding, I'm not going to do that to you.
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(Laughter)
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Instead, I'm going to tell you,
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what I'm going to talk about today is about a new form of collective poverty
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that many of us don't recognize
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and that urgently needs to be understood.
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I'm sure you've noticed that in the past 20 years,
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that asset has emerged.
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It's been generating wealth at a breakneck pace.
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As a tool, it has brought businesses deep customer insights,
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operational efficiency
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and enormous top-line growth.
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But for some,
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it has also provided a device to manipulate a democratic election
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or perform surveillance for profit or political purposes.
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What is this miracle asset?
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You've guessed it: it's data.
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Seven out of the top 10 most valuable companies in the world are tech companies
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that either directly generate profit from data
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or are empowered by data from the core.
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Multiple surveys show
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that the vast majority of business decision makers
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regard data as an essential asset for success.
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We have all experienced how data is shifting this major paradigm shift
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for our personal, economic and political lives.
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Whoever owns the data owns the future.
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But who's producing the data?
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I assume everyone in this room has a smartphone,
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several social media accounts
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and has done a Google search or two in the past week.
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We are all producing data. Yes.
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It is estimated that by 2030, 10 years from now,
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there will be about 125 billion connected devices in the world.
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That's an average of about 15 devices per person.
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We are already producing data every day.
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We'll be producing exponentially more.
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Google, Facebook and Tencent's combined revenue in 2018
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was 236 billion US dollars.
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Now, how many of you have received payment from them
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for the data you generate for them?
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None, right?
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Data has immense value but is centrally controlled and owned.
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You are all walking raw materials for those large data companies,
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but none of you are paid.
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Not only that,
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you're not even considered as part of this equation for income.
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So once again,
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we are undoubtedly equal:
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we're equally poor.
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Somebody else owns everything, and we own nothing.
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Sounds familiar, doesn't it?
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So what should we do?
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There might be some clues in how my life turned out
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after that difficult start.
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Things began to look up for my family in the '80s.
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The system evolved,
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and people began to be allowed to own a piece of what we created.
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"People diving into the ocean,"
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or "xia hai," the Chinese term,
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described those who left state-owned enterprise jobs
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and started their own businesses.
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Private ownership of a business
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became personal ownership of cars,
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properties, food, clothes and things.
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The economic machine started rolling,
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and people's lives began to improve.
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For the first time,
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to get rich was glorious.
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So in the '90s, when I went to study in Chengdu in west China,
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many young individuals like myself
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were well-positioned to take advantage of the new system.
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After I graduated from my university,
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I cofounded my first business and moved to Shenzhen,
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the brand-new special economic zone that used to be a fishing village.
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Twenty years later,
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Shenzhen has become a global innovation powerhouse.
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Private ownership was a form of liberty we didn't have before.
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It created unprecedented opportunities for our generations,
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motivating us to work and study incredibly hard.
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The result was that more than 850 million people rose out of poverty.
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According to the World Bank,
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China's extreme poverty rate in 1981, when I was a little kid, was 88 percent.
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By 2015, 0.7 percent.
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I am a product of that success,
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and I am very happy to share that today, I have my own AI business,
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and I lead a very worldly and dynamic life,
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a path that was unimaginable when I was a kid in west China.
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Of course, this prosperity came with a trade-off,
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with equality, the environment and freedom.
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And obviously I'm not here to argue that China has it all figured out.
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We haven't.
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Nor that data is fully comparable to physical assets.
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It is not.
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But my life experience allowed me to see what's hiding in plain sight.
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Currently, the public discourse
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is so focused on the regulatory and privacy issue
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when it comes to data ownership.
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But I want to ask:
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What if we look at data ownership in completely different ways?
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What if data ownership is, in fact,
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a personal, individual and economic issue?
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What if, in the new digital economy,
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we are allowed to own a piece of what we create
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and give people the liberty of private data ownership?
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The legal concept of ownership is when you can possess,
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use, gift, pass on, destroy
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or trade it or sell your asset
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at a price accepted by you.
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What if we give that same definition to individuals' data,
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so individuals can use or destroy our data
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or we trade it at our chosen price?
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Now, I know some of you might say,
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"I would never, ever trade my data for any amount of money."
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But that, let me remind you, is exactly what you're doing now,
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except you're giving your data away for free.
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Plus, privacy is a very personal and nuanced issue.
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You might have the privilege to prioritize your privacy over money,
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but for millions of small business owners in China
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who can't get bank loans easily,
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using their data to gain rapid loan approval from AI-powered lenders
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can answer their more pressing needs.
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What's private to you
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is different from what's private to others.
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What's private to you now
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is different from what was private when you were in college.
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Or, at least, I hope so.
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(Laughter)
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We are always, although often subconsciously,
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making such trade-offs
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based on our diverse personal beliefs and life priorities.
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That is why data ownership would be incomplete
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without a pricing power.
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By assigning pricing power to individuals,
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we gain a tool to reflect our personal and nuanced preferences.
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So, for example, you could choose to donate your data for free
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if a contribution to a particular medical research
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is very meaningful for you.
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Or, if we had the tools to set our behavior data
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at a price of, say, 100,000 US dollars,
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I doubt any political group would be able to target
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or manipulate your vote.
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You control. You decide.
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Now, I know this sounds probably implausible,
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but trends are already pointing to
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a growing and very powerful individual data ownership movement.
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First, start-ups are already creating tools
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to allow us to take back some control.
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A new browser called Brave
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empowers users with "Brave Shields" -- they literally call it that --
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by aggressively blocking data-grabbing ads and trackers,
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and avoid leaking data like other browsers.
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In return, users can take back some bargaining and pricing power.
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When users opt in to accept ads,
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Brave rewards users with "basic attention tokens"
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that can redeem content behind paywalls from publishers.
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And I've been using Brave for a few months.
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It has already blocked more than 200,000 ads and trackers
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and saved hours of my time.
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Now, I know some of you interact with your browser
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more than with your partners, so --
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(Laughter)
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you should at least find one that doesn't waste your time and is not creepy.
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(Laughter)
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Do you think Google is indispensable?
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Think again.
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A search engine is indispensable.
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Google just has the monopoly --
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for now.
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A search engine called DuckDuckGo doesn't store your personal information
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or follow you around with ads
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or track your personal browsing history.
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Instead, it gives all users the same search results
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instead of based on your personal browsing records.
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In London, a company called digi.me
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offers an app you can download on your smartphone
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that helps to import and consolidate your data generated by you
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from your Fitbit, Spotify,
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social media accounts ...
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And you can choose where to store your data,
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and digi.me will help you to make your data work for you
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by providing insights that used to be exclusively accessible
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by large data companies.
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In DC, a new initiative called UBDI, U-B-D-I,
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Universal Basic Data Income,
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helps people to make money
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by sharing anonymous insights through their data
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for companies that can use them for market research.
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And whenever a company purchases a study,
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users get paid in cash and UBDI points to track their contribution,
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potentially as much as 1,000 US dollars per year
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per their estimation.
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UBDI could be a very feasible path for universal basic income
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in the AI economy.
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Further, individual awareness of privacy and data ownership
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is growing fast
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as we all become aware of this monster we have unleashed in our pocket.
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I'm a mother of two preteen girls,
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and trust me,
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the single biggest source of stress and anxiety as a parent,
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for me, is my children's relationship with technology.
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This is a three-page agreement my husband and I make them sign
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before they receive their first [mobile phone].
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(Laughter)
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We want to help them to become
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digital citizens,
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but only if we can make them become smart and responsible ones.
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I help them to understand what kind of data should never be shared.
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So if you Google me,
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in fact -- actually, sorry -- if you DuckDuckGo me,
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you will find maybe a lot about me and my work,
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but you may find no information about my daughters.
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When they grow up,
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if they want to put themselves out there, it's their choice, not mine,
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despite that I insist they're the most beautiful,
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smartest and most extraordinary kids in the world, of course.
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And I know many people are having similar conversations
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and making similar decisions,
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which gives me hope
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that a truly smart data-rich future will be here soon.
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But I want to highlight the Clause 6 of this agreement.
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It says, "I will never, ever search for any information online
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if I would be embarrassed if seen by Grandma Dawnie."
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(Laughter)
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Try it. It's really effective.
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(Laughter)
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Throughout history,
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there has always been a trade-off between liberty and equality
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in the pursuit of prosperity.
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The world has constantly been going through the circle of wealth accumulation
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to wealth redistribution.
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As the tension between the haves and have-nots
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is breaking so many countries,
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it is in everyone's interest,
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including the large data companies,
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to prevent this new form of inequality.
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Of course, individual data ownership is not the perfect nor the complete answer
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to this profoundly complex question
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of what makes a good digital society.
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But according to McKinsey,
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AI will add 13 trillion US dollars of economic output in the next 10 years.
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Data generated by individuals will no doubt contribute
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to this enormous growth.
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Shouldn't we at least consider an economic model
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that empowers the people?
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And if private ownership helped to lift more than 850 million people
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out of poverty,
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it is our duty
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and we owe it to future generations
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to create a more inclusive AI economy
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that will empower the people in addition to businesses.
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Thank you.
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(Applause)
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