You’re not a customer, you’re the product being sold. Let’s get this straight: when a company tells you something is “free,” it doesn’t mean free. It means they’re harvesting every click, swipe, and idle search and packaging it for sale to the highest bidder. Google, Roku, Amazon, and their digital cousins aren’t here to make your life easier—they’re here to turn you into a walking, talking data farm. And the worst part? Most people don’t even realize it.
Your emails, your photos, your voice commands, even what your kids watch on TV, all of it is being recorded, analyzed, and monetized. “Convenience” is just the Trojan horse. And you, dear reader, are the unsuspecting gift inside.
The Myth of Choice: “Take It or Leave It”
Terms of service agreements aren’t contracts—they’re ultimatums. There’s no negotiating. You either surrender your privacy, or you can’t use the service. And let’s be honest: when was the last time you actually read one of these things? Those pages of legal gobbledygook exist to cover the company, not to protect you.
Even if you toggle every privacy setting available, most of it is smoke and mirrors. Companies bury real tracking behind layers of “optional” features that are anything but optional if you want the whole experience. In the end, you’ve consented to being spied on without realizing it.
Convenience Costs More Than You Think
That seamless photo backup, that smart speaker answering questions, that personalized recommendation—yeah, it’s convenient. But convenience comes at a price: your life. Every detail about your habits, routines, and interests is siphoned off and stored indefinitely. That vacation photo you uploaded five years ago? Still in the servers, still being analyzed. That search about your medical symptoms? Cataloged. Every click, every typo, every fleeting curiosity—sold to advertisers who know more about you than your own family.
And don’t think the kids escape this. Smart TVs, streaming devices, and apps collect sensitive data from minors without meaningful consent. Companies know children are online, yet they skip basic safeguards. Digital ID verification systems—marketed as “safety measures”—only deepen the problem by creating another permanent record of every user’s identity.
Big Tech Plays Dumb, You Pay the Price
The companies collecting your data love pretending they’re clueless. Roku “forgot” to check if users were kids. Google “forgot” that deleting a product might inconvenience someone. Convenient accidents, right? Wrong. These are calculated moves designed to maximize profit while keeping users helpless.
Wake up: the illusion of convenience masks coercion. Every click is consent, even if you never consciously gave it. Every app update, every cloud sync, every “feature improvement” is a reminder: you’re not in control.
Bottom Line: Fight Back
Stop treating convenience like a virtue. It’s a leash. It’s a trap. It’s a constant reminder that your life is data, and that data is worth billions. Until we demand absolute transparency, real consent, and real control over our information, Big Tech will continue to watch, analyze, and profit from every private moment.
The next time you tap “I agree,” remember this: you’re not agreeing to a service. You’re agreeing to be the product. And if that doesn’t make you angry, you haven’t been paying attention.
We are being screwed.
— Steve