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Honeypots - 1 month ago - subscribe - 225 Aufrufe - 46 Likes - De En Fr It 
# 112  The Maker's Sneaky Overview

By using the data tactics common today, a manufacturer can reconnect with a vast number of customers. What are the consequences?

o The internet has given everyone a direct connection to the world
o However, manufacturers also have a connection to buyers
o Manufacturers have an overview of hundreds of thousands of buyers
o The manifold consequences remain largely unnoticed
o Even AI, the technology of the future, stores user profiles

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The Maker's Sneaky Overview

By using the data tactics common today, a manufacturer can reconnect with a vast number of customers. What are the consequences?

o The internet has given everyone a direct connection to the world
o However, manufacturers also have a connection to buyers
o Manufacturers have an overview of hundreds of thousands of buyers
o The manifold consequences remain largely unnoticed
o Even AI, the technology of the future, stores user profiles

Hardly any of the buyers — that is, you, the internet users — have any idea of the consequences. Above all, the consequences that the manufacturer has a connection to hundreds of thousands of other buyers and thereby very quickly gains an overview.

The Internet is not a one-way street. The Internet has given everyone a connection to the big, wide world. However, on the Internet, every manufacturer also has a connection to the buyer. And hardly any of the buyers—that is, you, the Internet users—have any idea of the consequences.

Above all, the consequences of the manufacturer having a connection to hundreds of thousands of other buyers and thus gaining a clear overview very quickly. Are concerns ever raised about this? I hardly think so.

Perhaps 20 years ago, you bought a car, a vacuum cleaner, a telephone. After paying, it belonged to you, 100 percent. Today, things are often different. There’s the backchannel, the connection, and this changes the situation far more than many people realize.

The most extreme example I heard about today is Porsche. The car manufacturer Porsche is subject to sanctions in Russia for various reasons. As a result, Porsches in Russia can no longer be started.

You heard right, you can’t start them anymore. Why? Because the data connection to Porsche in Russia is cut off. Admittedly, this example is extreme.

But did you know that new cars have a SIM card installed? All that data is sent to the manufacturer? For example, how often the seatbelt pretensioner was activated, which addresses the navigation system searched for, what music is playing in the car. Or contact information is sent from the phone that’s synced with the entertainment system.

I think you can get a pretty good sense of who someone is if you know what kind of music they listen to regularly.

A completely different example is an app. A cycle app for women. ‘Users enter symptoms, mood, and other relevant data daily. The app does the rest. With data from the RingCon app, these patterns can be identified and consciously used to increase one’s own productivity and quality of life. Today’s modern woman has access to more data about her body than ever before.’

‘With the new Cycle Data Statistics feature of the RingCon app, users can now monitor their menstrual cycle in even greater detail.’ Who is really doing the monitoring? The users, perhaps, of their own cycles—but the manufacturer is monitoring the cycles of all users! The manufacturer stores all entries from all users regarding symptoms, mood, and other relevant data over months, even years, and sells this valuable data to whom, I wonder? Google? I don’t know.

Google itself has a fascinating program, Analytics. Hardly anyone is aware that Google Analytics also sends data to Google. Analytics is one of many Google tools designed to ship website visitor data to Silicon Valley.

Without Google tools, nothing would go to Silicon Valley. You need the Google tools. It’s not the websites; it’s the Google tools.

And it’s the pre-built websites that have the Google tools installed. HTML alone wouldn’t send any data to Silicon Valley. Why would it? No, a website originally programmed in HTML is free from surveillance.

The Google Analytics tool displays all visitor details for its own website on the screen. That is the benefit for the user. Google, however, reaps a much greater benefit. Does anyone see that? The Analytics user sees only the analysis of their own website. Google sees the analysis of all 44 million websites, as of 2025.

Google sees the analysis of 44 million websites. Perhaps this is the punishment for everyone thinking only of themselves? Further details on this tool are provided in Video No. 37, “The Sellout to Silicon Valley.” It is the ready-made websites that make it possible for data about visitors to be collected.

What are ready-made websites? Websites that come ready-made from the factory. WordPress, Jimdo, and Joomla produce ready-made websites. These are filled with images and text and uploaded to the web.

Before the advent of ready-made websites, real web designers programmed websites. They had no reason whatsoever to send data about their visitors to Silicon Valley. In ready-made websites, however, Google tools are installed that send their own visitors’ data to Silicon Valley.

So here, too, there is a kind of permanent connection back to the manufacturer. Only this connection doesn’t go to a manufacturer, but directly to Silicon Valley—to the central hub, so to speak. The data from app users and drivers also ends up in the same place: in Silicon Valley, at Google and Co.

And what about the much-touted future technology of AI? To answer that, we simply ask: where are the questions answered? On the cell phone, perhaps? No, you ask the central hub via the phone or the internet. It answers the question and stores it. Because AI literally adapts to you over time. Over time, AI learns how you ask questions and what you mean by certain things.

And AI, too, will resell its data on the vast market for user data. If you use AI in your daily work, then AI will support and assist you in your daily work as desired. And all of that is recorded centrally.

If it’s really the case that soon everyone in the world will need AI, then soon everyone will be recorded by AI. Then the world can be monitored from the central hub. And then everyone will go along with it, without a second thought. After all, it is the technology of the future.

This is another post on the topic: If no one else says it, I’ll say it. You can watch more videos anytime on blog.muinar.ch—free of surveillance and commercial breaks.

You can also like, subscribe to, and comment on the video on blog.muinar.ch without feeding any algorithm. If you need a website that doesn’t send your visitor data to Silicon Valley, check out muinar.ch.

If you found the video interesting, please share it. Like it on blog.muinar.ch or subscribe so you’ll be notified when the next video is posted. That’s it for today. Thanks for watching, and see you in the next video.