When is a cookie not a cookie?
Your online #privacy π has been sacrificed for the sake of advertising revenue.
According to one Wall Street Journal study, the top fifty Internet sites, from Yahoo to MSN, install an average of 64 data-laden cookies πͺ and personal tracking π΅οΈ beacons each.
Search π for a word like βchefβ on Dictionary.com, and the site installs up to 223 tracking cookies and beacons on your computer so that other websites can target π― you with adverts for saucepans and cookbooks.
As a OneSub user you are providing us with a lot of data about what #news you read.
You do this so that we can help you balance βοΈ your bias.
But we know this data is very personal and very precious.
We will never monetise π° your personal data without discussing it with you first and we will never do so in any way that would allow you to be personally identified.
Ultimately, OneSub is not here to gather and sell your data.
We will ask you to pay upfront for our service and we will always be transparent about where that money goes.
Unlike many free services - particularly social media platforms and search engines - you are not our product.