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A
So
who
thinks
personal
data
on
the
web
is
pretty
messed
up
right
now,
awesome
good
crowd!
Okay,
I
was
going
to
talk
to
you
a
bit
about
the
technical
things
that
we
do,
but
I
realized.
Everybody
in
this
room
is
smarter
about
these
things
than
I
am
so
textile.
A
We
exist
because
we
think
that
personal
data
on
the
web
is
really
broken.
We
think
that
the
future
should
be
something
like
an
iCloud
that
you
actually
own.
That's
verifiable!
That's
encrypted
that
you
can
choose
what
you
do
with
your
data
and
it's
interoperable
so
that
apps
and
services
that
create
data
for
you
aren't
the
last
place
that
data
can
be
used,
that
you
can
actually
build
on
top
of
it
and
create
more
and
more
value
to
yourself
with
your
data
and
to
other
people
that
you
want
to
share
that
with.
A
But
I
thought
it
was
really
cool
to
talk
to
you
about
why
we
think
that's
important,
because
I
think
that
this
crowd
comes
from
so
many
diverse
places.
A
lot
of
people
aren't
probably
thinking
of
that,
and
so
today
my
talk
is
the
first
entry
and
the
interplanetary
Journal
of
Medicine
I
lost
creativity
halfway
through
I.
Don't
think
it
should
be
Journal
of
medicine,
but
I
don't
know
what
so
we
should
come
up
with
a
journal.
This
is
the
identification
and
symptoms
of
personal
data
subservience
on
the
World
Wide
Web.
A
So
the
first
one
is
called
the
virtual
ink
ink
cartridge
disorder.
Did
anybody
ever
hear
this
case
where
Lexmark
sued
another
maker?
So
basically
they
put
a
chip
in
their
ink
cartridges
and
then
they
used
EMC
a
another
cartridge
maker
wanted
to
make
it
so
that
you
could
replicate
those.
So
you
could
buy
cheaper
cartridges
on
the
market.
They
used
the
MCA
to
try
to
sue
them
out
of
existence
they
lost,
but
they
tried.
Why
does
it
feel
a
little
bit
like
that
happens
with
our
data?
A
Anybody
ever
try
to
export
their
Facebook
data
and
you
ever
notice
that
it's
in
a
bunch
of
web
pages,
like
your
photos,
are
in
web
pages
like
they
make
it.
The
mote,
like
oh
yeah,
I,
want
Facebook
but
exported
it's
like
pretty
stupid,
so
we
ran
into
that
and
we
built
a
little
thing
around
it,
but
that
happens
everywhere
ever
anybody
ever
here.
Power
ventures
me
neither,
but
they
did
exist
for
a
while,
and
they
built
a
service
to
connect
all
your
social
services
so
that
you
could
social
applications.
A
So
you
could
control
them
from
one
dashboard.
They
were
sued
out
of
existence
by
Facebook,
okay,
okay,
they
didn't
want
other
people
to
connect
to
your
data
in
those
sorts
of
ways
that
make
it
more
useable
to
you,
I,
don't
know
whose
side
of
the
argument
I'm
on
for
whether
or
not
they
should
exist,
but
but
that's
actually
a
really
terrible
precedent
to
set
up.
They
actually
won
in
court
power
ventures
won
in
court,
but
far
too
late
for
a
start-up
to
exist.
They'd
already
lost
so
much
money.
A
Okay,
second
disorder,
the
Abercrombie
&
Fitch
disorder.
Anybody
ever
noticed
that,
like
as
a
clothing
retailer,
it's
built
bigger
and
more
successful.
They
all
just
look
the
same.
Did
anybody
ever
feel
that
way
about
our
web
apps
and
our
services?
Ever
wonder
why
it
happens?
That
way.
Did
anybody
ever
hear
about
this
Oh
nah,
though
Facebook
bought
this
VPN,
so
they
bought
a
VPN
20
million
users.
What
did
they
use
the
VPN
data
for
to
copy
snapchat
and
build
features
so
that
they
can
put
them
out
of
service?
Why?
A
Why
can't
we
have
multiple
applications
that
serve
different
users?
Why
are
they
all
going
for
the
lowest
common
denominator?
A
lot
of
broad
users?
Really
shallow
use
cases
really
boring?
Is
it
really
the
internet
we
want
to
be
part
of?
Why
is
that
happening
happens
all
over
the
place?
Anybody
here
use
mail
box.
Anybody
remember
that
nobody
used
mail
box.
I
know
you
don't
use
it
anymore,
but
they
existed
for
a
while,
and
it
was
a
really
great
inbox
application.
What
happened
Google
launched
Inbox?
A
What
happened
a
little
bit?
Wait
later,
mailbox
failed.
Why
did
they
fail
that
huge
competitors?
What
happened
later,
Google
shutdown
Inbox?
Why
is
all
our
email,
with
the
exact
same?
That's
strange
that
sucks?
Okay,
next
disorder,
the
functioning
disorder,
dysfunctional
disorient
disorder,
delorean
disorder?
What
happens
when
your
DeLorean
stops
running?
You
go
to
some
obscure
forum.
You
figure
out
how
to
make
it
run
again.
What
happens
when
your
apps
stop
stop
running
they
stop
running.
Why
is
that?
A
A
Okay,
final
one
in
verse,
key
just
dependents.
Anybody
ever
build
a
bot
or
an
app
on
slack
or
Twitter,
and
you
get
a
bunch
of
different
tokens.
You
get
some
keys,
you
get
one
for
everything
that
you
build.
That's
awesome,
that's
really
great
security,
for
when
you
build
an
app.
Why
is
it
that
when
I
log
in
with
my
Twitter
account
or
my
Facebook
account
or
my
Google
account,
they
sort
of
get
everything
that
I'm
doing
they
get
to
know
which
so
I'm
using
they
get
to
connect
to
different
data?
A
That's
being
produced
about
me,
Facebook
has
a
pixel.
There
I
think
the
estimates
over
on
David
picks
on
something
like
fifty
percent
of
web
webpage
webpages,
you
traffic,
maybe
more
if
you
were
actually
count
entries
and
exits
to
those
those
pages.
It's
probably
something
like
eight
eighty
to
ninety
percent
of
web
traffic
that
they're
actually
being
able
to
detect
who's,
doing
it.
What
and
where?
That's
weird,
that's
terrible!
Why
don't
I
have
an
API
key?
Why
don't
I
have
keys
that
I
that
somebody
actually
asked
me
for
that
can
tell
them?
A
Oh,
you
can
use
this
data
and
I
can
take
it
away.
That's
the
web
that
we
want
that's
what
we're
trying
to
build.
We
have
a
lot
of
other
cool
opportunities
to
share
this
with
you.
We
have
a
Photos
app
that
we
have
a
album
going
around,
that
you
can
join
it's
really
fun
and
interesting.
It
was
broken
until
right.
A
Now
we
just
pushed
a
fix
that
should
be
usable
here
we
have
a
science
fair,
the
entry
that
we're
going
to
show
tomorrow,
with
that
we
have
a
tag
game
going
around
that
you
can
play
tag
on
ipfs
and
we
have
a
workshop
tomorrow
to
show
you
how
how
to
help
build
apps
and
create
the
decentralized
iCloud.
Thank
you.