TED Talks Daily - How surveillance tech erodes your privacy | Jen Golbeck
Episode Date: July 13, 2026You've probably heard the warnings about digital privacy: read the terms of service, think before you share, be careful what you click. But AI ethicist Jen Golbeck says the problem runs a lot deeper t...han that. In this eye-opening talk, she reveals how corporations and governments built a system of "data colonialism" that tracks your movements, searches and habits — for profit and control. Learn how you can fight back against the surveillance state, starting with the devices in your own home. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
You're listening to TED Talks Daily, where we bring you new ideas to spark your curiosity every day.
I'm your host, Elise Hugh.
Most of us have heard the warnings about digital privacy.
Read the terms of service.
Watch what you share.
Be careful what you click.
But AI ethicist Jen Goldbeck thinks the problem runs a lot deeper.
On the web, every click, every search, every fraction of a second, our eyes linger on a piece of content is recorded.
And we're followed across the web into our patient portals.
our doctor's office, and into forums we thought were private.
And what we found is that if technology makes something possible and that something is profitable,
companies will do it pretty much regardless of the ethics.
Jen, who has spent years mapping the ways governments and corporations extract our data,
profit from it, and use it to consolidate power, has a name for this.
Data colonialism.
In her talk, she makes the case that it isn't just a tech problem or a privacy problem.
It's a threat to democracy itself.
Data colonialism is fundamentally incompatible with democracy,
because democracy requires that power be held in the hands of the people
and that we're governed with our consent.
But under this system, regardless of how our data is used,
the surveillance itself undermines core principles of democracy
so foundational that we wrote them into the Bill of Rights.
But she's here to do more than sound the alarm.
She has a plan, and it starts closer to home than you.
you might think. It's coming up right after a short break. And now our TED Talk of the Day.
There are over 100,000 automated license plate reading cameras in this country. And when you drive
past one, they don't just record your license plate, though they do that too. They record the
make and model of your car, the color, distinguishing marks like dense and scratches and even
your bumper stickers. So if you were to take your license plate off, they still know that car
belongs to you. And when you drive past a camera, the location and the time is recorded in the
list of places they know you've been. So if you were to become the victim of a stalker who works in
law enforcement, could they use that network to monitor your movements? They can, and they have.
If there is a demonstration in your town for gun rights or civil rights and the government takes an
interest, could they use this network to get a list of everyone who drove to or even who drove
past that protest? They can, and they have. And if you live in a state where abortion is illegal
and you self-administer one and your family disapproves, after you fled from them and left the state,
can they go to law enforcement and have your movements around the country tracked? They can,
and they have. It's one of the thousands of ways that all of our movements are monitored every day.
Our cars are recording our acceleration and speed and braking,
sharing that with data brokers who sell access
to car insurance companies who use it to change our rates.
Our phones monitor our interactions,
not just with apps, though they do that too,
but our movements through physical space,
every business we enter,
and the identities of people who are nearby.
On the web, every click, every search,
every fraction of a second,
our eyes linger on a piece of content is recorded,
and we're followed across the web,
into our patient portals at our doctor's office,
and into forums we thought were private.
And what we found is that if technology makes something possible
and that something is profitable,
companies will do it pretty much regardless of the ethics.
And this kind of surveillance pricing is in use on the web
for everything from airline tickets to close,
but now it's following us offline and meeting us.
in stores. Companies make billions of dollars a year using data from us that was collected without
our permission and that they employ without our consent. But these systems don't exist just for
commerce. They exist to build detailed dossiers of our thoughts, habits, and actions that can be
used to manipulate our behavior or weaponized against us. Data that law enforcement would require
a warrant to collect if they did it directly,
they now can just go by for a few dollars
from private companies with no court order
and no probable cause.
The surveillance allows them to circumvent
the protections that we have written into law.
And I don't know about you,
but if this is supposed to be the land of the free,
it suddenly doesn't feel like it.
We have a name for this kind of system.
When the government and corporations
go into a place and engage in extraction,
taking away private property, resources, land, value, and labor from people,
concentrating it for themselves,
and then using it to keep that system in place, we call it colonialism.
In America's days as a British colony may be long over,
but we have slid into a new form of colonialism,
not at the hands of foreign powers and plantation owners and trading companies,
but at the hands of tech companies and government agencies.
And this is called Data Colonial.
The idea of data colonialism describes when governments and corporations extracts data from people
and use it to generate profits and exert control.
And it's a system that we can see in place and in operation every day.
For example, Airlines Reporting Corporation is a data broker owned by the major airlines in the U.S.,
and they sell our flight records to the government, including to customs and border protection.
Clearview AI has built facial recognition technology
using images taken from social media and the web without permission,
and they sell that facial recognition to immigration officials, including ICE.
Cambridge Analytica built detailed psychological insights
on millions of Americans using stolen social media data,
and they sold that to politicians who were running for office,
who turned around and used it,
to micro-target us with,
Facebook ads designed to manipulate our vote.
And these companies take their profits and use them to lobby those same politicians to make
sure they enact policies that keep this system in place.
Data colonialism is fundamentally incompatible with democracy, because democracy requires
that power be held in the hands of the people and that we're governed with our consent.
But under this system, regardless of how our data is used, the surveillance is,
undermines core principles of democracy so foundational that we wrote them into the Bill of Rights.
Freedom of speech, which is chilled under profiling in the destruction of anonymity.
Freedom of association, which is eroded under the surveillance of our interactions and communications
and relationships. The right-to-do process, which disappears in the darkness of opaque algorithms
that make decisions about us with our extracted data, and protection from unreasonably.
search and seizure that can't exist when our now digital lives are constantly monitored and
data-mined and monetized. But the system is so huge that it can feel powerless to stand in the face
of it. But we shouldn't feel powerless. And in fact, for all the division in our country right now,
this is an issue that can unite us, because data colonialism violates values that are core to liberals
and conservatives on the left and the right.
It diminishes the meaning of limited government
of personal responsibility of private property.
It weakens freedom and equality in civil rights
and the value of consent.
And the wild power that it concentrates
in the hands of corporations and government agencies
diminishes the power of the people,
which is where it needs to reside for democracy to thrive.
And it is far past time for us to revolt against that.
But how do you do it in the face of a system that is so big and omnipresent?
I don't want you to feel powerless because you're not.
There are things that you can do today to start fighting against this.
You can start with the systems that are closest to you.
For example, do you own a video doorbell?
Last year, Ring announced a partnership with flock safety
who operates those license plate cameras
that would have integrated your doorbell footage into their network
and given access to law enforcement.
But this year, Ring cancelled that partnership
after a backlash from their customers.
Yeah.
Similarly, Kroger, the grocery store,
was going to test camera-enabled shelf labels in their stores,
but after people threatened to boycott
and Congress was investigating,
they canceled that plan as well.
So look for these ways that surveillance is trying to creep into your life,
and they are going to tempt you with convenience,
and you have to tell them no.
Become incredibly annoying to corporations
for the sake of democracy
because history shows that you can win.
But this isn't enough to take down data colonialism.
We need to do more.
So in your cities, in your counties,
even your homeowners association,
see if they have contracts with surveillance companies.
Show up to town meetings and city halls
when these issues are being discussed.
Demand they turn over records,
insist that contracts be canceled.
Are they letting data centers in
that will take your land and divert your water
and tax your power grid?
Insist that those permits be denied.
And what is likely to happen
is that your elected officials
will not listen the first or the second time,
but keep fighting,
and if they refuse, vote them out of office
because you can work to make your communities
as safe as possible
from the influence of this system.
At the state and federal level,
we are so long overdue for fundamental reforms
in the way we think about data ownership,
privacy, and corporate governance.
There's a lot of work to do there.
But one place that we can start
is by stopping the government
from getting around the protections
of requiring a warrant
where they just buy our data from private companies.
The Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, FISA,
expressly prohibits the government
from doing bulk data collection on U.S. citizens,
but the government has frequently gotten around that
by buying the data from private companies.
The FBI is doing this now.
This so-called data broker loophole
could be closed every time Congress reauthorizes FISA.
The amendment to close it failed on a tie vote.
And this year, they didn't even let the amendment come to the floor.
FISA has lapsed.
And it's a stark reminder of how colonialism re-entrenches itself
by subverting democracy.
So talk to your representative,
and tell them to close the data broker loophole,
and look at the state and local level as well.
So your government and law enforcement officials
are not getting around the legal protections
that we have over our data
by going to private companies who have collected it
without our consent and sell it to them with no protection.
250 years ago, the founder said that when a system of government
becomes oppressive, even if that's embodied in part in corporations,
It's our right and our duty to throw it off.
Our data belongs to us.
It's valuable and it's powerful,
but when it's extracted,
that value and power is taken out of our hands.
Under data colonialism,
you are being exploited by a system that oppresses you,
taking your data and using it to diminish the rights and protections
that we hold foundational to our democracy.
You should be angry, but you shouldn't feel powerless,
because today's day that you can commit to join the fight to dismantle data colonialism,
reclaiming the power of our data into the hands of the people,
and ensuring the future of our democracy.
Thank you.
That was Jen Goldbeck at TED Democracy Philadelphia in 26.
If you're curious about TED's curation, visit TED.com slash curation guidelines.
And that's it for today.
Ted Talks Daily is a podcast from TED.
This episode was fact.
checked by the TED research team and produced and edited by our team.
Martha Estefanos, Oliver Friedman, Lucy Little, Emma Tobner, and Tonzica, Sunlarnevo.
Additional support from Daniela Ballereseo, Christopher Faisi Bogan, Valentina Bohanini,
Ban Ban-Ban-Chang, Brian Green, and Laney Lott.
Learn more at podcasts.com.
I am Elise Hupe.
I'll be back tomorrow with a fresh idea for your feet.
Thanks for listening.
