Why you should get paid for your data Jennifer Zhu Scott

I grew up in the late ’70s in rural China

during the final years of my country’s
pursuit of absolute equality

at the expense of liberty.

At that time, everybody had a job,

but everyone was struggling.

In the early ’80s,
my dad was an electrician,

and my mom worked two shifts
in the local hospital.

But still, we didn’t have enough food,

and our living conditions were dismal.

We were undoubtedly equal –

we were equally poor.

The state owned everything.

We owned nothing.

The story I’m going to share with you
is about my struggles

of overcoming adversity

with my resilience, grit
and sheer determination.

No, I’m just kidding,
I’m not going to do that to you.

(Laughter)

Instead, I’m going to tell you,

what I’m going to talk about today
is about a new form of collective poverty

that many of us don’t recognize

and that urgently needs to be understood.

I’m sure you’ve noticed
that in the past 20 years,

that asset has emerged.

It’s been generating wealth
at a breakneck pace.

As a tool, it has brought businesses
deep customer insights,

operational efficiency

and enormous top-line growth.

But for some,

it has also provided a device
to manipulate a democratic election

or perform surveillance
for profit or political purposes.

What is this miracle asset?

You’ve guessed it: it’s data.

Seven out of the top 10 most valuable
companies in the world are tech companies

that either directly generate
profit from data

or are empowered by data from the core.

Multiple surveys show

that the vast majority
of business decision makers

regard data as an essential
asset for success.

We have all experienced how data
is shifting this major paradigm shift

for our personal, economic
and political lives.

Whoever owns the data owns the future.

But who’s producing the data?

I assume everyone in this room
has a smartphone,

several social media accounts

and has done a Google search
or two in the past week.

We are all producing data. Yes.

It is estimated that by 2030,
10 years from now,

there will be about 125 billion
connected devices in the world.

That’s an average of about
15 devices per person.

We are already producing data every day.

We’ll be producing exponentially more.

Google, Facebook and Tencent’s
combined revenue in 2018

was 236 billion US dollars.

Now, how many of you
have received payment from them

for the data you generate for them?

None, right?

Data has immense value
but is centrally controlled and owned.

You are all walking raw materials
for those large data companies,

but none of you are paid.

Not only that,

you’re not even considered
as part of this equation for income.

So once again,

we are undoubtedly equal:

we’re equally poor.

Somebody else owns everything,
and we own nothing.

Sounds familiar, doesn’t it?

So what should we do?

There might be some clues
in how my life turned out

after that difficult start.

Things began to look up
for my family in the ’80s.

The system evolved,

and people began to be allowed
to own a piece of what we created.

“People diving into the ocean,”

or “xia hai,” the Chinese term,

described those who left
state-owned enterprise jobs

and started their own businesses.

Private ownership of a business

became personal ownership of cars,

properties, food, clothes and things.

The economic machine started rolling,

and people’s lives began to improve.

For the first time,

to get rich was glorious.

So in the ’90s, when I went
to study in Chengdu in west China,

many young individuals like myself

were well-positioned
to take advantage of the new system.

After I graduated from my university,

I cofounded my first business
and moved to Shenzhen,

the brand-new special economic zone
that used to be a fishing village.

Twenty years later,

Shenzhen has become
a global innovation powerhouse.

Private ownership was a form of liberty
we didn’t have before.

It created unprecedented opportunities
for our generations,

motivating us to work
and study incredibly hard.

The result was that more than
850 million people rose out of poverty.

According to the World Bank,

China’s extreme poverty rate in 1981,
when I was a little kid, was 88 percent.

By 2015, 0.7 percent.

I am a product of that success,

and I am very happy to share that today,
I have my own AI business,

and I lead a very worldly
and dynamic life,

a path that was unimaginable
when I was a kid in west China.

Of course, this prosperity
came with a trade-off,

with equality,
the environment and freedom.

And obviously I’m not here to argue
that China has it all figured out.

We haven’t.

Nor that data is fully comparable
to physical assets.

It is not.

But my life experience allowed me
to see what’s hiding in plain sight.

Currently, the public discourse

is so focused on the regulatory
and privacy issue

when it comes to data ownership.

But I want to ask:

What if we look at data ownership
in completely different ways?

What if data ownership is, in fact,

a personal, individual and economic issue?

What if, in the new digital economy,

we are allowed to own
a piece of what we create

and give people the liberty
of private data ownership?

The legal concept of ownership
is when you can possess,

use, gift, pass on, destroy

or trade it or sell your asset

at a price accepted by you.

What if we give that same definition
to individuals' data,

so individuals can use or destroy our data

or we trade it at our chosen price?

Now, I know some of you might say,

“I would never, ever trade my data
for any amount of money.”

But that, let me remind you,
is exactly what you’re doing now,

except you’re giving
your data away for free.

Plus, privacy is a very personal
and nuanced issue.

You might have the privilege
to prioritize your privacy over money,

but for millions of small
business owners in China

who can’t get bank loans easily,

using their data to gain rapid loan
approval from AI-powered lenders

can answer their more pressing needs.

What’s private to you

is different from
what’s private to others.

What’s private to you now

is different from what was private
when you were in college.

Or, at least, I hope so.

(Laughter)

We are always,
although often subconsciously,

making such trade-offs

based on our diverse personal beliefs
and life priorities.

That is why data ownership
would be incomplete

without a pricing power.

By assigning pricing power to individuals,

we gain a tool to reflect
our personal and nuanced preferences.

So, for example, you could choose
to donate your data for free

if a contribution
to a particular medical research

is very meaningful for you.

Or, if we had the tools
to set our behavior data

at a price of, say,
100,000 US dollars,

I doubt any political group
would be able to target

or manipulate your vote.

You control. You decide.

Now, I know this sounds
probably implausible,

but trends are already pointing to

a growing and very powerful
individual data ownership movement.

First, start-ups
are already creating tools

to allow us to take back some control.

A new browser called Brave

empowers users with “Brave Shields” –
they literally call it that –

by aggressively blocking
data-grabbing ads and trackers,

and avoid leaking data
like other browsers.

In return, users can take back
some bargaining and pricing power.

When users opt in to accept ads,

Brave rewards users
with “basic attention tokens”

that can redeem content
behind paywalls from publishers.

And I’ve been using Brave
for a few months.

It has already blocked
more than 200,000 ads and trackers

and saved hours of my time.

Now, I know some of you
interact with your browser

more than with your partners, so –

(Laughter)

you should at least find one that doesn’t
waste your time and is not creepy.

(Laughter)

Do you think Google is indispensable?

Think again.

A search engine is indispensable.

Google just has the monopoly –

for now.

A search engine called DuckDuckGo
doesn’t store your personal information

or follow you around with ads

or track your personal browsing history.

Instead, it gives all users
the same search results

instead of based on
your personal browsing records.

In London, a company called digi.me

offers an app you can download
on your smartphone

that helps to import and consolidate
your data generated by you

from your Fitbit, Spotify,

social media accounts …

And you can choose
where to store your data,

and digi.me will help you
to make your data work for you

by providing insights that used
to be exclusively accessible

by large data companies.

In DC, a new initiative
called UBDI, U-B-D-I,

Universal Basic Data Income,

helps people to make money

by sharing anonymous insights
through their data

for companies that can use them
for market research.

And whenever a company purchases a study,

users get paid in cash and UBDI points
to track their contribution,

potentially as much
as 1,000 US dollars per year

per their estimation.

UBDI could be a very feasible path
for universal basic income

in the AI economy.

Further, individual awareness
of privacy and data ownership

is growing fast

as we all become aware of this monster
we have unleashed in our pocket.

I’m a mother of two preteen girls,

and trust me,

the single biggest source of stress
and anxiety as a parent,

for me, is my children’s
relationship with technology.

This is a three-page agreement
my husband and I make them sign

before they receive
their first [mobile phone].

(Laughter)

We want to help them to become

digital citizens,

but only if we can make them
become smart and responsible ones.

I help them to understand
what kind of data should never be shared.

So if you Google me,

in fact – actually, sorry –
if you DuckDuckGo me,

you will find maybe a lot
about me and my work,

but you may find no information
about my daughters.

When they grow up,

if they want to put themselves out there,
it’s their choice, not mine,

despite that I insist
they’re the most beautiful,

smartest and most extraordinary
kids in the world, of course.

And I know many people
are having similar conversations

and making similar decisions,

which gives me hope

that a truly smart data-rich future
will be here soon.

But I want to highlight
the Clause 6 of this agreement.

It says, “I will never, ever search
for any information online

if I would be embarrassed
if seen by Grandma Dawnie.”

(Laughter)

Try it. It’s really effective.

(Laughter)

Throughout history,

there has always been a trade-off
between liberty and equality

in the pursuit of prosperity.

The world has constantly been going
through the circle of wealth accumulation

to wealth redistribution.

As the tension between
the haves and have-nots

is breaking so many countries,

it is in everyone’s interest,

including the large data companies,

to prevent this new form of inequality.

Of course, individual data ownership
is not the perfect nor the complete answer

to this profoundly complex question

of what makes a good digital society.

But according to McKinsey,

AI will add 13 trillion US dollars
of economic output in the next 10 years.

Data generated by individuals
will no doubt contribute

to this enormous growth.

Shouldn’t we at least consider
an economic model

that empowers the people?

And if private ownership helped
to lift more than 850 million people

out of poverty,

it is our duty

and we owe it to future generations

to create a more inclusive AI economy

that will empower the people
in addition to businesses.

Thank you.

(Applause)

我在 70 年代末期在中国农村长大,那

是我国

以牺牲自由为代价追求绝对平等的最后几年。

那时,每个人都有工作,

但每个人都在挣扎。

80 年代初,
我爸爸是一名电工

,我妈妈
在当地医院轮班工作。

但是,我们仍然没有足够的食物

,我们的生活条件也很糟糕。

我们无疑是平等的——

我们同样贫穷。

国家拥有一切。

我们一无所有。

我要和你们分享的故事
是关于我

用我的韧性、勇气
和绝对的决心克服逆境的斗争。

不,我只是在开玩笑,
我不会那样对你的。

(笑声)

相反,我要告诉你们,

我今天要谈论的
是一种新形式的集体贫困

,我们中的许多人都没有认识

到这种形式,并且迫切需要了解这种形式。

我相信您已经注意到
,在过去的 20 年中,

这种资产已经出现。

它一直
在以惊人的速度创造财富。

作为一种工具,它为企业带来了
深刻的客户洞察、

运营效率

和巨大的收入增长。

但对一些人来说,

它还提供了一种手段
来操纵民主选举


出于利润或政治目的进行监视。

这个神奇的资产是什么?

你已经猜到了:它是数据。

全球市值最高的 10
家公司中有 7 家是科技公司

,它们要么直接
从数据中获利,

要么通过核心数据赋能。

多项调查显示


绝大多数业务决策者都

将数据视为成功的重要
资产。

我们都经历过数据
如何改变

我们个人、经济
和政治生活的这一重大范式转变。

谁拥有数据,谁就拥有未来。

但谁在生产数据?

我假设这个房间里的每个人
都有一部智能手机、

几个社交媒体账户,

并且在过去一周里进行了一两次谷歌搜索

我们都在生产数据。 是的。

据估计,到 2030 年,即
10 年后,

全球将有大约 1250 亿台
联网设备。

平均每人大约有
15 台设备。

我们每天都在生产数据。

我们的产量将成倍增加。

谷歌、Facebook 和腾讯
2018 年的总收入

为 2360 亿美元。

现在,你们中有多少人
从他们那里收到了

为您为他们生成的数据而支付的款项?

没有,对吧?

数据具有巨大的价值,
但却是集中控制和拥有的。

你们都是
那些大数据公司的行走原材料,

却没有一个人得到报酬。

不仅如此,

您甚至不被
视为收入等式的一部分。

所以再一次,

我们无疑是平等的:

我们同样贫穷。

别人拥有一切,
而我们一无所有。

听起来很熟悉,不是吗?

那么我们应该怎么做呢?

在那艰难的开端之后,
我的生活如何变成了一些线索


世纪 80 年代,我家人的情况开始好转。

系统不断发展

,人们开始被
允许拥有我们创造的一部分。

“下海的人”

或“下海”是中文术语,

描述的是那些离开
国企工作

并开始自己创业的人。

企业的

私人所有权变成了汽车、

财产、食物、衣服和物品的个人所有权。

经济机器开始运转

,人们的生活开始改善。

第一次

,致富是光荣的。

所以在90年代,当我
去中国西部的成都学习的时候,

很多像我这样的年轻人

都可以很好
地利用新的制度。

大学毕业后,

我共同创办了自己的第一家企业
,搬到了深圳

这个曾经是渔村的全新经济特区。

二十年后,

深圳已
成为全球创新强国。

私有制是我们以前没有的一种自由形式


为我们这一代人创造了前所未有的机会,

激励我们努力工作
和学习。

结果是超过
8.5亿人摆脱了贫困。

根据世界银行

的数据,1981
年我还是个小孩的时候,中国的极端贫困率为 88%。

到 2015 年,为 0.7%。

我是成功的产物

,今天我很高兴与大家分享,
我拥有自己的人工智能业务,

过着非常世俗
和充满活力的生活,

这是
我小时候在中国西部无法想象的道路。

当然,这种繁荣
伴随

着平等
、环境和自由的权衡。

显然,我不是在这里争辩
说中国已经弄清楚了。

我们没有。

这些数据也不能完全
与实物资产相提并论。

它不是。

但我的生活经历让
我看到了隐藏在视线中的东西。

目前,当涉及到数据所有权时,公共话语

非常关注监管
和隐私问题

但我想问:

如果我们
以完全不同的方式看待数据所有权会怎样?

如果数据所有权实际上

是个人、个人和经济问题怎么办?

如果在新的数字经济中,

我们被允许拥有
我们创造的一部分

并赋予人们
私有数据所有权的自由,那会怎样?

所有权的法律概念
是当您可以拥有、

使用、赠送、传递、销毁

或交易它或

以您接受的价格出售您的资产时。

如果我们对个人数据给出相同的定义

那么个人可以使用或销毁我们的数据,

或者我们以我们选择的价格交易它会怎样?

现在,我知道你们中的一些人可能会说,

“我永远不会用我的数据
来换取任何金额的钱。”

但是,让我提醒你,
这正是你现在正在做的事情,

除了
你免费提供你的数据。

此外,隐私是一个非常个人化
和微妙的问题。

您可能有特权
将您的隐私优先于金钱,

但对于中国数百万

无法轻松获得银行贷款的小企业主来说,

使用他们的数据
获得人工智能贷款机构的快速贷款批准

可以满足他们更紧迫的需求。

对你来说

私人的东西和对别人私人的东西是不同的。

现在对你来说私密的东西与你在大学时

私密的东西不同

或者,至少,我希望如此。

(笑声)

我们总是,
虽然常常是下意识地,

根据我们不同的个人信仰
和生活优先事项做出这样的取舍。

这就是为什么如果没有定价权,数据所有权
将是不完整的

通过将定价权分配给个人,

我们获得了反映
我们个人和细微偏好的工具。

因此,例如,

如果
对特定医学研究

的贡献对您非常有意义,您可以选择免费捐赠您的数据。

或者,如果我们有
工具将我们的行为数据设置


100,000 美元的价格,

我怀疑任何政治团体
都能够瞄准

或操纵你的投票。

你控制。 你决定。

现在,我知道这听起来
可能难以置信,

但趋势已经表明,个人数据所有权运动

正在增长且非常强大

首先,初创
企业已经在创造工具

,让我们能够收回一些控制权。

一种名为 Brave 的新浏览器

通过积极阻止
数据抓取广告和跟踪器,

并避免
像其他浏览器一样泄露数据,从而为用户提供“勇敢的盾牌”——他们实际上是这样称呼它的。

作为回报,用户可以收回
一些议价和定价权。

当用户选择接受广告时,

Brave 会向用户奖励
“基本注意令牌”

,这些
令牌可以从出版商那里兑换付费墙后面的内容。

我已经使用
Brave 几个月了。

它已经阻止
了超过 200,000 个广告和跟踪器,

并节省了我数小时的时间。

现在,我知道你们中的一些人
与您的浏览器互动

比与您的合作伙伴互动更多,所以–

(笑声)

您至少应该找到一个不会
浪费您的时间并且不会令人毛骨悚然的浏览器。

(笑声)

你认为谷歌是不可或缺的吗?

再想一想。

搜索引擎是必不可少的。

谷歌目前只是

垄断。

名为 DuckDuckGo 的搜索引擎
不会存储您的个人信息,也不会

通过广告

跟踪您或跟踪您的个人浏览历史。

相反,它为所有用户提供
相同的搜索结果,

而不是基于
您的个人浏览记录。

在伦敦,一家名为 digi.me 的公司

提供了一款应用程序,您可以在智能手机上下载该应用程序,该应用

程序有助于导入和整合

您从 Fitbit、Spotify、

社交媒体帐户生成的数据……

而且您可以选择
存储数据的位置 ,

而 digi.me 将

通过提供过去
只能

由大型数据公司访问的见解来帮助您使数据为您服务。

在华盛顿特区,一项
名为 UBDI、U-B-D-I、

通用基本数据收入的新计划

帮助人们

通过他们的数据分享匿名见解来赚钱,

供公司使用这些数据
进行市场研究。

每当一家公司购买一项研究时,

用户都会获得现金和 UBDI 积分
来跟踪他们的贡献,

根据他们的估计,每年可能高达 1,000 美元。

UBDI 可能是人工智能经济
中普遍基本收入

的一条非常可行的途径。

此外,随着我们都意识到我们在口袋里释放的这个怪物,个人
对隐私和数据所有权的意识

正在快速增长

我是两个十几岁女孩的母亲

,相信我,

作为父母的最大压力和焦虑来源,

对我来说,是我的孩子
与技术的关系。

这是一份长达三页的协议
,我和丈夫让

他们在
收到第一部[手机]之前签署。

(笑声)

我们想帮助他们成为

数字公民,

但前提是我们能让他们
成为聪明和负责任的人。

我帮助他们了解
永远不应该共享什么样的数据。

所以如果你用谷歌搜索我

,事实上——实际上,对不起——
如果你用 DuckDuckGo 我,

你可能会找到很多
关于我和我的工作的信息,

但你可能找不到
关于我女儿的信息。

当他们长大后,

如果他们想把自己放在那里,
那是他们的选择,而不是我的选择,

尽管我坚持认为
他们当然是世界上最漂亮、

最聪明、最非凡的
孩子。

而且我知道很多人
都在进行类似的对话

并做出类似的决定,

这让我

希望一个真正智能的数据丰富的未来
很快就会到来。

但我想强调
该协议的第 6 条。

上面写着:“如果被道妮奶奶看到我会感到尴尬,我永远不会
在网上搜索任何信息

。”

(笑声)

试试看。 这真的很有效。

(笑声)

纵观历史,在追求繁荣的过程中,

总是
在自由与平等之间进行权衡

世界一直在
经历财富积累

到财富再分配的循环。

由于贫富之间的紧张关系

正在打破如此多的国家,防止

这种新形式的不平等符合每个人的利益,

包括大型数据公司

当然,个人数据
所有权并不是完美数字社会的完美答案,也不是完美答案

但据麦肯锡称,

人工智能将
在未来 10 年增加 13 万亿美元的经济产出。

个人产生的数据
无疑将

有助于这种巨大的增长。

难道我们不应该至少考虑
一种

赋予人民权力的经济模式吗?

如果私有制
帮助超过 8.5 亿人

摆脱贫困,

那是我们的责任

,我们有责任为

子孙后代创造一个更具包容性的人工智能经济

,除了企业之外,还将赋予人民权力

谢谢你。

(掌声)