I recently made a purchase at a friend's small brick and mortar retailer using a credit card. He texted me a couple days later thanking me for the support.
Turns out the shop has a Square cash register, and for cc transactions Square provides any email addresses associated with that card, provided the customer has "opted in".
Similarly, I purchased an air compressor at Lowes a few months back. Lowes has been emailing my wife about the air compressor pretty regularly, as she used that card (mine, not joint) for some online shopping a few months prior. Good thing it wasn't a surprise for her.
Marketing emails from Square are especially frustrating because I do want to opt into receipts via email when I make purchases using my credit card on Square registers. It’s especially convenient for my business credit card, even when I make a purchase at a new location I don’t need to manually enter the special receipts email alias to send it to my accountant, it just happens automatically at most places. But then my accountant and I also automatically get opted in to marketing emails and there’s no way to separate those two things.
Living in Thailand where cash is primary and often the only form of payment, it took no time to adjust to it and now that piece of mind of not having every purchase tracked is great. Yesterday I bought a monitor at the mall and they gave me a pretty nice discount and free shipping because I didn't go credit/debit. You see card usage requiring $50 minimums or buyer pays the network fee too. Herein lies a pretty big societal difference where the network fee isn't built-in and cash payers aren’t subsidizing or implicitly paying those fees for card users.
Credit cards in the US are effectively a regressive tax, because the people with good credit using cards get their fees refunded through card perks. Thailand is very good about not having regressive taxes in general. Someone making the median income doesn't pay more than about 2% tax at most.
In the US, card companies require that merchants charge the same price for both cash and credit, so there’s no incentive to avoid using cards (so the processors make more money overall on fees).
Cash handling costs for normal businesses - at least in the west - are higher than cars handling costs. The only time that changes is for companies avoiding tax or money laundering.
In Australia basically no one I know has or uses cash anymore.
It probably wasn't helped by how bulky and heavy Australian coins are coupled with how many you need to buy anything these days - but other than the coins it is sad, I don't really like having all money handled by private companies.
After GDPR was passed I've got pretty much no "legal" spam. "Unsubscribe" links in emails actually work. If they didn't - then companies sending those emails would get huge fines. The only spam that I receive now is from "Nigerian princes", but GDPR can't stop those anyway.
Counterpoint: Google and Facebook are still around and stalking users, and their malicious SDKs (as well as other analytics SDKs) still litter every mainstream app possible with no way to even opt-out (overlooking the fact that such tracking should be opt-in to begin with).
Putting this info all in one place is an excellent first step, but seems far from “simple”. What would it take to turn this list into a 1-click opt-out for all of these services?
You can't, unless the services are mandated by law to make this possible. They are trying it as hard as possible for you to know this information and to opt out.
“This form is currently only available to Californian residents. Please see our Privacy Statement for more information, and for details on how to contact the Privacy Office.”
Corporations will abuse you. This data selling isn’t an accident, it’s all about making a few extra pennies on your custom. Every company does it so you can’t vote with your dollar. The only protection is legislation.
Very nice collection. Not for me unfortunately, but still great! I'd love to see more international and compnies from other countries listed in the future!
Would be awesome if there was a ChatGPT bot that could use Twilio's Voice API to navigate IVRs and negotiate with representatives to perform these opt-outs.
What the hell? How is this even legal? That kind of info should only be available to the police with a warrant.