Startup Stealth Data Working To Uncover the Identities of Website Users (bizjournals.com) 111
Stealth Data's third co-founder Chad Sneed experienced marketing frustrations firsthand through his family's dealership, Dennis Sneed Ford in Gower, Missouri. Sneed, who's a vice president and partner, said the dealership spends a significant amount on marketing, from search engines to third-party advertising. A bulk of the dealership's website visitors were anonymous, however, which meant it couldn't follow-up with visitors to try and close a sale. Sneed wanted to unlock that information and started talking to the dealership's outside marketing firm, Phame Influence, to see if it was possible. Puckett, who co-founded Phame with Paris, also is a trial lawyer.
"My lawyer hat instantly says no," Puckett said.
But after digging further, he discovered it's legal and that using the information for cold calling and emailing is fair game.
Co-founder Chad Sneed noted that he doesn't see any privacy issues.
Just what we need... (Score:5, Insightful)
More fucky spam calls about cars. Yay. I love this late-stage capitalist internet, don't you?
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Re: Just what we need... (Score:5, Insightful)
The Internet gained its Place in reality, From Cooperative profitless efforts In which money, time and efforts were donated by all for a Iendeavour considered too important to involve profit lest it be torn apart.
The internet started from a DoD effort during the cold war. It was (is?) more or less a weapon against communism. The internet as we know it today started in 1983, and the first domains were registered in 1985. Here are the first 20:
1. symbolics.com -15/03/1985
2. bbn.com - 24/04/1985
3. think.com -24/051985
4. mcc.com - 11/07/1985
5. dec.com - 30/09/1985
6. northrop.com - 07/11/1985
7. xerox.com -09/01/1986
8. sri.com - 17/01/1986
9. hp.com - 03/03/1986
10. bellcore.com - 05/03/1986
11. ibm.com - 19/03/1986
12. sun.com - 19/03/1986
13. intel.com - 25/03/1986
14. ti.com - 25/03/1986
15. att.com - 25/04/1986
16. gmr.com - 08/05/1986
17. tek.com - 08/05/1986
18. fmc.com - 10/07/1986
19. ub.com - 10/07/1986
20. bell-atl.com - 05/08/1986
I don't know about you, but those don't look like cooperative profitless organizations to me. In fact a lot of them look like companies who built and sold the equipment necessary for the internet to function, and they almost certainly did that with a profit motive.
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We would still have the Internet without capitalism. Although people would actually have to obey rules or else their ISP would kick their ass offline. All capitalism brought to the Net was ads, bloated web browsers, constant trespass on privacy, and a security nightmare. Wish NSF never privatized a single pipe.
Re:Just what we need... (Score:5, Insightful)
More fucky spam calls about cars. Yay. I love this late-stage capitalist internet, don't you?
Poor Chad.
If only there was a way to have a web site ask a user "is it okay if we ever contact you or would you prefer us to fuck off forever?", then ask for contact info if the answer isn't "fuck off".
Imagine a world where they could have "on a scale of one to ten where one is 'it's okay' and ten is 'I'd rather eat my own eyeballs, how willing are you to let us contact you", then ask for contact info for anyone who scored 5 or lower.
Point is, there are honest ways of collecting contact info... and there are ways of collecting contact info you know it's against the owner's wishes for you to have. Chad had to ask a lawyer, which says it all.
Re: Just what we need... (Score:2)
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"Spirit of the law"? Hell, these assholes don't even try sticking to the letter of the law.
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More fucky spam calls about cars. Yay. I love this late-stage capitalist internet, don't you?
Was it better when it wasn't?
I remember the internet of the 1990s. It was certainly more sparse.
What is it that was better? And... this is Slashdot.. are you telling me you can't figure out how to prevent the companies from gathering this data?
Re: Just what we need... (Score:2)
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Perhaps a bit more sparse, however there are many more walled gardens now then ever before. At one point in time I could freely access most academic information, historical newspapers etc. All gone to paywalls. FB / Social Media accomplished what AOL tried to do before http existed. They got far but eventually people grew tired of the walls and left. FB doesn't have walls its essentially an entire universe in comparison.
I'd say it was a whole lot more sparse. As you say, it was mostly academia and those things closely related to it. There were a few services, but god.. many were so primitive. I actually remember order plane tickets off easysabre over a terminal connection.
Personally, I prefer this, with all of it's flaws, over that. But to each their own.
Re: Just what we need... (Score:1)
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As I remember it, you could access the databases of many academic libraries, but that wa
Re: Just what we need... (Score:1)
Re: Just what we need... (Score:2)
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Did you use the internet in the 90s?
Yes.
Re: Just what we need... (Score:1)
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I remember the times of the dot com bubble. You could type the ticker of even the most obscure little company and get dozens of pages with in depth articles. Now, you get three two-month-old articles behind three separate paywalls. Only $10 here, only $15 here, and only $12 here, I wish I could just get one internet-wide subscription, I would be happy to pay for that if they just divided it amongst themselves based on visitor counts or something like that. But no, to access all content the way you used to b
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I remember the times of the dot com bubble. You could type the ticker of even the most obscure little company and get dozens of pages with in depth articles. Now, you get three two-month-old articles behind three separate paywalls. Only $10 here, only $15 here, and only $12 here, I wish I could just get one internet-wide subscription, I would be happy to pay for that if they just divided it amongst themselves based on visitor counts or something like that. But no, to access all content the way you used to be able to, you have to manage dozens of subscriptions even though you only read one or two articles from each of them. And even then the information has actually become sparser.
So yes, it used to be better. At least for everything related to the stock market, but lots of other domains are quite similar.
Internet wide subscription? Have you ever purchased one paper-wide subscription that gave you the NYT, LA Times, and London Times all together? Why do y'all insist that things on the internet be grouped together? You all seem to have this idea in your head that the internet is a single "thing". It's not. It never was. It is nothing more than a collection of private, public, government, and corporate networks. The only thing they have in common is protocols. Other than that there is nothing, at all, tha
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But that's the problem. It used to be like that. You used to be able to just google something and read a bunch of articles without any hassle. Today you get a bunch of paywalls and the only way to get the same experience as before, is by subscribing to every single one of them.
Why couldn't there be a single system? Let's say you pay $30 per month for some kind of internet pass. You visit NYT, get the paywall, and click "use Internet Pass". The next day, you click on a link to an LA Times article and, again,
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We tried that already. Micropayments. It never took off. It requires every company that produces newspapers or videos or whatever to voluntarily group themselves into some sort of collective.
Your idea isn't novel. It's been tried. Hell, we're still trying it for streaming audio. Doesn't seem to be working out there either.
The height of insanity is to keep trying the same shit over and over and over. The first attempt is fine.. Maybe even the second.. But after a while you got to say "this isn't wo
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If it's a separate fee for every page you visit, it has a discouraging effect on users. But if you pay a fixed fee every month, and that fee gets divided between the sites you visit, that's a different matter.
VISA is a kind of "collective" too, but websites don't seem to have any trouble supporting that.
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If it's a separate fee for every page you visit, it has a discouraging effect on users. But if you pay a fixed fee every month, and that fee gets divided between the sites you visit, that's a different matter.
VISA is a kind of "collective" too, but websites don't seem to have any trouble supporting that.
Well.. c'mon.. VISA has 60 (maybe 70) years attached to it. It sure wasn't nearly as ubiquitous when it was 20.
If you think your idea will work, then run with it. Personally I think it's a fool's errand, but I've been wrong plenty of times before. Go start the next Paypal. Maybe you'll end up as a billionaire.
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What is it that was better?
Search engines, for one. AltaVista and the late 90's Google were FAR better than what Google is today. SEO has screwed up search results to an ungodly degree, and Google's actual search functionality is not anywhere near as useful as it was 20 years ago.
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What is it that was better?
Search engines, for one. AltaVista and the late 90's Google were FAR better than what Google is today. SEO has screwed up search results to an ungodly degree, and Google's actual search functionality is not anywhere near as useful as it was 20 years ago.
I don't use stock Google much anymore (prefer DuckDuckGo). But one does need to consider that there is...what? Maybe 100x more shit on the web today than 20 years ago?
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Commies have been saying "late stage capitalism" ever since the rise of many powerful socialist/communist states in the 1940s....and capitalism only seems to have thrived since then. The only remaining socialist/communist states are basically the only places in the world that are poor enough that people are starving.
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Re: Just what we need... (Score:1)
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Re:Fuck you, Chad. (Score:5, Insightful)
Re: Fuck you, Chad. (Score:1)
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Re:Fuck you, Chad. (Score:5, Insightful)
Then you can stop using the entire internet, because I have news for you: Google, Amazon, CloudFlare, Akamai, Microsoft and all the other sumbitches have already de-anonymized you and know everything there is to know about you. It's just that they keep it hush-hush, unlike the Chad fellow who doesn't appear to be the brightest bulb in the box and makes it the explicit purpose of his johnny-come-lately startup.
Also, you're not buying anything from him - anymore than you're buying anything from Google: you're the product on display, not the customer.
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Then you can stop using the entire internet, because I have news for you: Google, Amazon, CloudFlare, Akamai, Microsoft and all the other sumbitches have already de-anonymized you and know everything there is to know about you
None of those companies have ever called me after I visited their website.
Do Not Call violation? (Score:2)
The legal question will be whether visiting a company website establishes a 'business relationship'. Otherwise, the fines from the Do Not Call Registry will apply. This could get expensive for Chad if he loses that case!
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Google, Amazon, CloudFlare, Akamai, Microsoft and all the other sumbitches have already de-anonymized you and know everything there is to know about you. It's just that they keep it hush-hush
I have never had a call or email as a result of just visiting a website. And the entities you mention seem to be keeping it so hushed that I really don't mind.
Google for example must be hushing that they know where I live by pretending that they think I live in Uxbridge UK - because that's where Google Maps always opens for me, and meanwhile (arse and elbow fashion) Google search recommends eye laser treatments in Luton, and I don't need eye laser treatment anyway.
I live over 200 miles from either U
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I have never had a call or email as a result of just visiting a website. And the entities you mention seem to be keeping it so hushed that I really don't mind.
That you know of.
It's not like they'd tell you where they got your info, or that the people working the phones would even know.
But any spammer that calls my home phone gets the full meal deal where I waste as much of his time as possible. As they're about to rage quit, I say, "Oh yeah- I forgot to tell you that your mom will be home late again tonight, but this time she'll be paid!"
That really makes them cranky and their rage is like music to my ears. Try it sometime.
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Also, you're not buying anything from him - anymore than you're buying anything from Google: you're the product on display, not the customer.
Actually, I did buy a phone from Google: a Pixel 4a 5G.
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I would love to see some actual evidence to back these claims up.
Maybe it's true in the US where you don't have much privacy, kind of ironic considering how much people complain about things being Orwellian... But in Europe if they were doing that it would be illegal and if anyone could prove it there would be massive fines, tens of billions of Euros.
How, for example, does Google identify you if you say visit google.com via Firefox? Assume you don't have a Google account and are on a dynamic IP address like
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Fuck off with this victim-blaming bullshit.
People who don't know about ad-blockers and other privacy tools, or how to use them effectively DO NOT DESERVE to be spammed.
They are fucking victims, you miserable, self-important, egotistical cunt. They deserve sympathy and help, not contempt from fucking wankers.
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are you fucking stupid? unable to comprehend simple language?
I never said that defensive measures aren't necessary.
I said that this cunt should stop blaming the victims and stop saying that they deserve to be victimised.
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All the large tech firms can already do this, across the many websites they provide services for, track you where ever you go and add it to your profile which has all your contact details and all your social media accounts and substantive product purchases history.
They attempt to surreptitiously target advertising at you, they do not bombard you directly because, they know it would fail and piss people off. No point in doing it.
Along comes douche bag business type thinks this is a great idea because spammi
I'm picturing someone with an adding machine.. (Score:2)
I'm picturing someone with an adding machine, a typewriter, and two six-line Model 500 sitting on his desk. Probably still drives a 1984 Town Car, too.
I knew a guy like this one. Doctor, who was a client of the company I worked for at the time. This was probably 2001-2002.
This fella wanted to do the same as this ex car-felon.
I didn't have the heart to tell him the NSA already had it.
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Except the NSA will not use high-pressure tactics to sell you a car.
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No, but the NSA will use high-pressure sales tactics to sell you freedom.
Cos that's what they're selling.
No, really!
Stop laughing!
Hopefully, this problem will self correct (Score:5, Insightful)
A bulk of the dealership's website visitors were anonymous, however, which meant it couldn't follow-up with visitors to try and close a sale.
"Hi, my name is Chad, from Sneed Automotive, how are you today, Mr. Jones?"
"...How do you know my name?"
"You visited our website."
"And?"
"And, we were able to contact you as a result of your visi--"
*click*
The conversion rate on these calls is going to be utter crap. There's a difference between a "vague awareness" that you're being tracked on the internet, and "explicitly getting a follow-up call about a website you visited".
When the conversion rates for these calls don't justify the money spent on this level of tracking, it'll likely self-correct. Leave it to a car salesman to find the bottom of the scum on the lake floor, and say to himself, "This calls for trench digging equipment."
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"Hi, my name is Chad, from Sneed Automotive, how are you today, Mr. Jones?"
Are people really still answering calls from unknown numbers? Ok, maybe a handful of folks have a legit reason to do so, but it's pretty easy to tell what a spammy 10 digit phone number looks like. Your example phone call there would never be answered by me in the first place. The ones that succeed are the ones that have spoofed my area code and prefix on my work cell, which is rare.
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A bulk of the dealership's website visitors were anonymous, however, which meant it couldn't follow-up with visitors to try and close a sale.
"Hi, my name is Chad, from Sneed Automotive, how are you today, Mr. Jones?"
"...How do you know my name?"
"You visited our website."
"And?"
"And, we were able to contact you as a result of your visi--"
*click*"
You got it all wrong. Chad clearly has penis and performance issues, and wouldn’t he like to try your performance pills. That way, he can rock his lady instead of having the pool boy do it while he makes calls. Be sure to get his number and email, so you can contact him if you get cut off, before you offer to sell them so he can join your “special” mailing and call list. If it’s a female, you can explainable to her the benefits of breast enhancement and pursuing a career in adult ent
Somebody sign up Chad... (Score:1)
Somebody needs to sign up Chad to every porn and other questionable site in existance.
Re:Somebody sign up Chad... (Score:4, Funny)
Slashdot doesn't need another questionable account.
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With sites full of questionable content like:
ass.golf
butt.church
fart.computer
dildo.pizza
mydickandballs.com
swole.dog
sexual.fish
dong.zone
69.bingo
poop.rodeo
boners.lol
piss.farm
cum.energy
robotbutts.com
burgerking.sex
rectal.dentist
powerful.dog
horny.town
coffeeofdoom.com
questionablecontent.net
evil (Score:2)
that's epic creepy
"CHAD" (Score:2)
That must be made-up (Score:2)
Chad Sneed. Seriously. Now you're just f&cking with us.
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You just know a mustache is involved.
Re: That must be made-up (Score:2)
Formerly Stacy Chuck.
Chad Sneed, Gower, Missouri (Score:5, Informative)
Chad Sneed, Gower, Missouri
https://www.dealerrater.com/sa... [dealerrater.com]
https://www.linkedin.com/in/ch... [linkedin.com]
https://www.facebook.com/sneed... [facebook.com]
https://www.smartbackgroundche... [smartbackg...checks.com]
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Someone wanting to drive the point home would hire one of these research firms and post worldwide everything they find.*
*Naturally making certain it's all legal.
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I'm sure the auto-response robot wasn't programmed to provide that information :-(
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Re:Chad Sneed, Gower, Missouri (Score:5, Informative)
https://www.sneedford.com/meet-our-staff.html https://www.dealerrater.com/sa... [dealerrater.com]
Chadwick is also a failed realtor with zero listings or sales.
https://www.zillow.com/profile/chadwickts
Chadwick, who is 36 years old lives at lives at 4950 Central St Apt 201, Kansas City, MO 64112-2524
https://www.zabasearch.com/peo... [zabasearch.com]
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Maybe give Chad a ring? His work phone number is (816) 281-9323 and email address chad@sneedford.com.
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Be aware that if you visit his pages while also signed in yourself, suddenly you're going to be connected to this guy. Like Facebook will recommend you as a friend to him, etc.
I use a Firefox extension, Facebook Container, that isolates FB from the FB widgets and cookies on websites.
https://addons.mozilla.org/en-... [mozilla.org]
"Facebook Container works by isolating your Facebook identity into a separate container that makes it harder for Facebook to track your visits to other websites with third-party cookies."
This prevents a bunch of that linking. Once I added that to FB, I finally stopped getting personalized ads (from external websites' visits) on FB.
Legal and fair? Not here! (Score:2, Informative)
But after digging further, he discovered it's legal and that using the information for cold calling and emailing is fair game.
Luckily I live in a civilized country where cold calling and emailing is illegal in itself, no matter how they got my info. And this kind of tracking is even more illegal, even if they don't use it for anything. (Denmark, EU, in case you are curious)
Good Luck (Score:1)
In other words... (Score:2)
a bunch of Privacy Rapists. [urbandictionary.com]
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What clothes does one have to wear to be considered one of those?
Where's the guy whining about the modern internet? (Score:2, Funny)
That whiny bastard complaining how he needs an email address to do anything on the Internet would have been on topic this time and yet he didn't post right away.
You had one job, ONE JOB!
Uncovering people's names and personal details? (Score:3)
It would be a shame if this happened to you, Chad.
https://www.dealerrater.com/sa... [dealerrater.com]
Translation (Score:2)
A bulk of the dealership's website visitors were anonymous, however, which meant it couldn't follow-up with visitors to try and close a sale.
Annoy people who were just browsing and wanted to remain anonymous from "car salesmen". Can't understand why, though, they have such a great reputation for not hassling people -- oh, wait...
And then there's this:
But after digging further, he discovered it's legal and that using the information for cold calling and emailing is fair game.
Better check those phone numbers against the Do Not Call list ...
Puckett, who co-founded Phame with Paris ... (Score:2)
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Sneed (Score:1)
A bulk of the dealership's website visitors were anonymous,
They were there by mistake. Actually looking for Sneed's Feed and Seed (formerly Chuck's).
Kickstarter (Score:2, Insightful)
Would it be illegal to fund a Kickstarter to hunt these fuckers down and throw them into wood chippers?
(Asking for a friend)
Re:like this? Assassination Politics Jim Bell 2003 (Score:2)
https://www.zeugmaweb.net/arti... [zeugmaweb.net]
Assassination Politics
by Jim Bell
How can we translate the freedom afforded by the Internet to ordinary life?
How can we keep the government from banning encryption, digital cash, and other systems that will improve our freedom?
A few months ago, I had a truly and quite literally "revolutionary" idea, and I jokingly called it "Assassination Politics": I speculated on the question of whether an organization could be set u
Chad Sneed... (Score:2)
... Just the name alone should be a warning sign.
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How is that supposed to work? (Score:2)
Is any company with the necessary data to match identity to a dynamic IP even selling to third parties?
Apple, Google, Facebook and internet backbone/hub providers have the data to do it for a significant percentage of people with dynamic IPs ... are any of them even selling?
really?! (Score:1)
Anyone have his home address?
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> Co-founder Chad Sneed noted that he doesn't see any privacy issues.
He needs to visit an optometrist.
Go ahead and thank me later (Score:1)
Hmmm (Score:2)
Chad doesnâ(TM)t see any privacy issues (Score:1)